Which haylage do you all use?

RumbleTheTumble

Well-Known Member
Joined
6 October 2019
Messages
58
Visit site
One of my shetlands is dust allergic so I swapped from hay to haylage two years ago. after reading up on the brands I went with horsehage blue. I'm very happy with it and they are all well on it and, thankfully, we have grazing and they are small so don't eat loads as it is very expensive. I notice other brands are quite a bit cheaper...does anyone have good experience with these ones...ie Mole valley own brand for example? The big bales are out...they simply couldn't get through t fast enough..I'd be interested to hear how others get on with haylage and the different amounts needed and the expense...thanks...
 

cobgoblin

Bugrit! Millennium hand and shrimp.
Joined
19 November 2011
Messages
10,209
Visit site
We use the Mole Valley one.... The purple is quite a rich ryegrass, the blue is a regular high fibre. Both are fairly dry and far nicer than horsehage.
They sell a meadow haylage too, in a pinkish pack... I can't remember the brand, but that's OK too.
 

Sail_away

Well-Known Member
Joined
6 January 2019
Messages
552
Visit site
Easy pack Timothy haylage, they do ryegrass too I think. It is more than hay but cheaper than horsehage. It’s definitely made a difference, he doesn’t cough during the warmup anymore. The quality has been very good and consistent, and the bales are tightly packed so go a long way. Well, they would do for a Shetland... the ISH pig goes through 3 bales in a week just for overnight haynets.
 

holeymoley

Well-Known Member
Joined
18 November 2012
Messages
4,645
Visit site
Silver moor lite is pretty much the same as Horsehage. And roughly £1-2 cheaper.
I have an ems laminitic so need to be very strict with his food, however when it’s too cold to soak hay I go on to high fibre haylage. I initially used Horsehage blue/ purple but it went up to £9.95 at the nearest shop so I decided to source something else. Silvermoor lite/Timothy is the Pretty much the same analysis as Horsehage blue/purple and costs £7.50 per bale.
 
Top