rose bud
Well-Known Member
Phew!! Thank you touchstone! After doing lots of research I found fast fibre as it seemed so low in calories etc, so would be disappointed to find out it wasn't! Thanks 
Nope. It is starch 5%... then a couple of lines down 2.9% SUGAR. Not sugarS. They have divvy'd it up for us. Check website.
Blimey I have been feeding it as was advised it was suitable for a fatty but now worried he is slightly cresty and footy on stony groundCould this be the fast fibre.....?
All he gets is handful ready grass to mop up excess liquid from small green scoop of fast fibre so it's not such a slop.
Apart from that he's on hay / straw mix smalled gauged nets and can pick at our very trashed paddock.
Thought I had it sussed and now worried again![]()
Basically sweepings off the floor then![]()
Because A&P have a very good marketing dept.
If you want a high fibre feed, what on earth is wrong with grassnuts? Soaked and mixed with dried grass, they do exactly the same job as FF, without any additives and for considerably less money.
I feed it as it fits in well with my forage analysis and it's sloppy for my old boy to eat safely.
Plus it soaks quickly (5 mins).
It there were more easily available unmolassed hay/straw chaffs, I would be happier.
As it is - if you can't feed molassed or alfalfa - you're choices are limited![]()
Reading he bag at work of fast fibre you had to add chaff and sugarbeet to it anyway.
well, no starch is not sugar. it is a completely different molecule, and behaves very differently to sugar, it is stored sugar yes but it doesnt affect insulin levels/osmosis etc. that is like saying oxygen is water because water contains oxygen...
If the feed works for you, great. If not, great. No need to slate something just because you don't get on with it.
Well, you just keep thinking that then my dear!!!
For those that realise starch is sugar...Starches are carbohydrates in which 300 to 1000 glucose units join together. It is a polysaccharide which plants use to store energy for later use. Starch forms in grains with an insoluble outer layer which remain in the cell where it is formed until the energy is needed. Then it can be broken down into soluble glucose units. Starches are smaller than cellulose units, and can be more readily used for energy. In animals, the equivalent of starches is glycogen, which can be stored in the muscles or in the liver for later use.
If you have a laminitic, you will realise the significance of not feeding any starch as we all know what it breaks down into - even by saliva, before it reaches the gut!
That's what it sounds like!
TBH I've never seen it only read about it on here so am not qualified to speak about it but I would be unhappy paying for that, I'd prefer to buy one bag of beet and a non mollassed chaff then mix my own, would be far better value for money.
well, no starch is not sugar. it is a completely different molecule, and behaves very differently to sugar, it is stored sugar yes but it doesnt affect insulin levels/osmosis etc. that is like saying oxygen is water because water contains oxygen...
Have you had a look at simple systems feeds?
i have my mare on topspec balancer and chaff, but people on my yard and i have before used simple systems, they have lots of unmolassed chops and feeds..x
If the feed works for you, great. If not, great. No need to slate something just because you don't get on with it.
ok - so is Fast Fibre a good thing to feed? I've had no issues on it and i don't feed enough of it to be a money thing (around 1 round scoop a day) but feedback on here isn't exactly sparkling!
My farrier said one of his clients horses has come down with lami - he's an old boy with no teeth but the owner got the impression that you could feed fast fibre ad lib as a hay replacement.....!!!!
It's been marketed as a hay replacer but is the marketing misleading?![]()