I got this article in my inbox today from the Kentucky Equine Research Health Review Newsletter, and I thought I would share it with you all.
Essentially, the article states that in a study where two groups of horses (one allowed to munch on loose hay all day, and one allowed to munch on grain all day) were given the choice (through a selection process; press the plate to receive xyz product) to receive hay or complete feed pellets, horses chose hay much more than pellets. - To break it down, horses chose hay many more times than they chose pellets to munch on throughout the day. The study also showed that the horses who were given loose hay with the option to receive more hay or receive pellets "grazed" around their stall much less than horses given pellets with the option to receive more.
If I haven't confused you by now, congratulations!
So all of that being said (I urge you to read the article; it's way less confusing than I just made it sound), do you provide your stabled ponies with hay to munch on all day? Do you provide them with hay in their pastures if they aren't cooped up? How do you battle boredom?!
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Riding a horse is not a gentle hobby, to be picked up and laid down like a game of Solitaire. It is a grand passion. - Ralph Waldo Emerson
I reckon I have a couple of horses here that would stand at the pellet despencer till it was emty!! If they were monks they would be friar Tuck! It's a interesting study, I would have bet money on the pellets being eaten the most. Our horses are a bit spoilt , they spent all day and night in large paddocks, no boredom here.
In winter my arab gelding gets grassy hay, free choice, almost exclusively except a very small supplement of flax, vitamins, handful oats, wheat germ (that's his treat). I hand feed him very small pieces of carrot, but he has to work/do some little trick for them. When the first tiny shoots of green come up in spring he is out on pasture looking for any little bit, but still relies on freechoice hay for most of his fill. What quickly happens is he decides the grass is better than hay, and I want him to have a balance, so gradually I have to cut down the time he spends in the pasture or he'd just have a belly full of tiny green shoots. When the pasture really comes in full force, by May, I have to put a grazing muzzle on him and restrict total time on pasture because he really would pig out. So the time he spends in his dry lot/paddock is for hay, and the rest is a relatively short time out on the pasture. With this combination his weight stays good, not too fat, of course he works a lot more in summer, and his feet are good even on daily rocky trails (barefoot). But last year he got a little too much pasture and went tender, which resolved itself because I got him off the grass as soon as I realized. No vet treatment was necessary and we were back on the trail after a couple of weeks r&r. Also his behavior gets pretty kooky if he gets too much fresh greens. I supplement with magnesium on the theory this might help.
Sometimes he probably is bored when he can't be on the pasture all day, and he isn't trail climbing, but he won't die of boredom. On the other hand he could die of laminits if he gets too much pasture or grain but not hay, so easy choice.
-- Edited by Marlene on Saturday 16th of April 2011 06:46:29 PM
-- Edited by Marlene on Saturday 16th of April 2011 06:47:34 PM