Lexie81
Well-Known Member
Oh how annoying i spent ages typing that reply!!
She was on a scoop of sugar beet, and half a scoop of soaked calm and condition twice a day, but now on nothing as i am hoping that natures best will work!
I bought a very underweight TB a good few years ago. I felt so sorry for her. No amount of food or haylage put weight on her, she just ended up a stress head and began leaving most of her net each night. Probably why she was so poor in the first place, to make her sane to sell!! It was like a vicious circle but the turning point was when I moved her to a farm with very good grass, after the summer there she looked great.
I did continue to feed her though but cut out the conditionoing cubes, baileys no 1 etc etc that Id been desperatly feeding to try to get some weight on her.
Alfa A is a great as a base instead of the cherry chop you are feeding. Lasts much longer too.
I have found hay is the best thing to feed if underweight, up the hay first before any hard feed, mine are out all day but in the winter they get hay chucked out everyday and chaff and sugarbeet twice a day, agree grass has no nutrients this time of year.
helloooooooo?!?!?!
Am i invisible![]()
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lol!!
Amymay - Suzie86 has tried to tell all the kind people replying that this post is over a year old, so any advice is probably a bit useless now.
She is the grey one, and yes she is definately too thin, but I will try the pink powder/vitamins and get her teeth done asap!
better too thin than too fat.
I wouldn't say its better to be to thin than too fat coming into winter especially as this year is going to be a harsh winter worse than last years snow! maybe i would agree coming into spring but certainly not this time of year.
better too thin than too fat.
I wouldn't say its better to be to thin than too fat coming into winter especially as this year is going to be a harsh winter worse than last years snow! maybe i would agree coming into spring but certainly not this time of year.
PMSL AND STILL PEOPLE KEEP POSTING![]()