Denali
Well-Known Member
I hope this is in the right place……. So what are nuts? I’ve been reading more than posting and can’t quite figure out the US version of nuts. Any advice is more than welcome.
We call the large ones biscuits ?Just to confuse you, large ones are also called cobs! ?
Now you’re having a laugh ?And the thin ones are pencils!
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I remember being taught that, but haven't heard anyone use the term for years!And the thin ones are pencils!
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And the thin ones are pencils!
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Now you’re having a laugh ?
I don't think nuts and pencils are something that are distinguished in either Canada or the US. These terms were new terms to me here so understand the OPs confusion!! That said, we do distinguish "cubes" but normally in the context of hay cubes
And cobs as in hay cobs.
When i was a child, there was one type of pony nuts:-Spillers. which were a pelleted compound feed.
I found this though in the 80s they were still considered new in Devon.
1958 – First pony nuts – The first compound feed for horses, SPILLERS Horse and Pony Cubes, is launched.
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really? I got my first horse in 1973 and lived in rural Devon. He was fed Spillers H & P as I knew absolutely nothing about feeding horses at that stage. I didn't think Devon was that backward
my confusion came when I was looking after cattle and the farmer kept talking about "cake" WTF is cake.
Local big feed suppliers sold oats, barley, bran (in cloth sacks), flaked maize, full fat sugar beet and Spillers horse and pony nuts. Most people fed the straights but a few fed the nuts. Riding stable ponies where i first liveried got a scoop of oats if they worked so i fed that at first.
Feed merchants also did their own coarse mix which they blended onsite. I fed their Hunter mix which had all sorts of high calories goodies in it as my pony was more arab/tb so less of a good doer. Before that she was getting oats, flaked maize and sugarbeet in winter. I knew about linseed but with nowhere to cook i didn't use it.
I grew up in the gap where it wasn't common to cut your own chaff but bagged chaffs weren't seen yet so when i returned to riding in the late 90s suddenly everyone was feeding Mollichaff or Alfa A which I'd never seen.
We did know about horseage thougjh as the Westerways were local but it wasn't something we gave to ponies.
Just to confuse matters, we used the word 'cake' to describe slices of hay as in give 3 cakes of hay. Then i realised no one understood me in London/Herts so s sections or slices.