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Is Your Overweight Horse
Eating Enough?
by Eric HaydtIt is hard
to imagine when looking at your chubby companions
that they might not be getting enough to eat.
Horses who tend to be easy keepers, and either
maintain their weight or get overweight on very
little grain, are often a harder feeding
challenge those horses who seem to not be able to
eat enough. If you are measuring your feed in
cups or handfuls, you may have a horse in this
category. We call what you feed a guilt
cup and is often fed because they give you
that pathetic look when everyone else gets to
eat.
Breeds such as Morgans and
Warmbloods are often easy keepers. Ponies and
miniature horses are also candidates for the easy
keeper category. However, any breed can be
susceptible to a slow metabolism. Just like
people, horses are individuals and can't be
lumped into a specific group.
Nutritionally, the amount of
grain that you give the easy keepers is doing
virtually nothing unless it allows you to catch
them. Just about every feed on the market today
requires the typical 1000 lb. horse to be fed
anywhere from 5 lbs. to as much as 10 lbs. per
day. Just look on the back of the bag or read the
feed tag for feeding directions and do the math.
The feeding rates are designed to provide your
horse the proper amount of protein, fat, fiber,
vitamins, and minerals for the type of horse
being fed and the type of feed. For instance,
young horses, broodmares and breeding stallions
typically require higher levels of protein in the
diet. Horses being fed small amount of hay or
pasture may need more fiber in the grain diet.
And thin horses may need higher levels of fat.
We tend to see easy keepers as
horses that have sufficient pasture or hay,
usually no elevated requirements for extra
protein, and they certainly don't need anymore
fat. The problem is balancing the vitamins and
minerals that they are lacking in their diet by
not feeding the recommended amount of feed. Over
a matter of time, the horse will either become
slightly deficient or will pull the nutrients it
needs from bone and other tissue that needs to
eventually be replaced. There are a multitude of
vitamin and mineral supplements on the market,
but often they are designed only for specific
needs and lacking in a few of the necessary
nutrients. When you try to balance a couple of
different supplements to make up for a short fall
in one, you often end up duplicating other
nutrients and wasting money. As with any animal,
obesity puts a strain on the whole system
supporting all that weight. Unfortunately, the
easy keeper also has the problem of being
underfed nutrients that contribute to proper hair
and hoof growth, immune response, stamina, and
normal cellular function.
In addition, if you are feeding
any diets that supplement yeast cultures,
probiotics, or any other nutruceutical type
products, they too will be fed in quantities too
small to perform the functions they were provided
for in the first place.
The best and easiest way is to
feed a diet designed for easy keepers that is
designed to provide all the vitamins and
minerals, but not the added calories that seem to
continue to add up around the girth area. That
way, fat and unhappy horse gets to eat something
along with all his pals in the barn. In addition,
they get to eat a diet where the nutrients are
balanced by a nutritionist who takes into
consideration limitations of the easy keeper
diet. The analogy is similar to baking. Certainly
I would listen to the advise of a baker rather
than continuing to dump until the mix looks
correct. The batter may look right, but will the
cake, or the horse, rise to the occasion when you
need it most.
So remember, if you are feeding
less than the recommended amount listed on the
feedbag, you are not going to be meeting the
vitamin and mineral needs of the horse. Consider
a diet that requires less quantity and provides a
higher level of nutrient fortification per pound
of feed. I'm not guaranteeing that your horse
will run faster, jump higher, or even look a lot
different, but internally you will be maintaining
a healthier horse.
Eric Haydt
General Manager
Equine Specialty Feed Company, L.C.
800-267-7198
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