AllieBaba
Posted : 1/27/2010 3:12:30 AM
I was having trouble keeping weight on my mare at the beginning of winter when it started raining and blowing. She needed her teeth floated, chokes on hay (she wolfs it, probably because she's needed her teeth floated for so long, prior to when I got her, so now it's become a habit with her, though I had her teeth done).
In the winter, I feed cracked corn. Right now I'm feeding 3-5 quarts of equus senior, 3-5 quarts of alfalfa pellets, and two quarts of cracked corn twice a day. It's a lot of feed, I don't recommend it for horses that are stalled, but my horses are not stalled, it's cold and windy, and she loses weight like crazy when it's cold and wet out...plus I had to put weight on her after she lost weight over a few days before the equine dentist was able to get to her.
When the weather is warmer, of course the corn goes bye-bye (I don't recommend riding a horse that is getting a gallon of corn a day...for one thing they'll overheat, and for another it makes them quite squirrelly) and the rations get reduced pretty drastically...2 quarts of each, equus & alfalfa. If I'm worried she isn't getting enough bulk, I'll cut the equus down to one quart, and give more alfalfa.
But if you're having trouble getting weight on her, I'd try corn. Don't start out with what I'm feeding, introduce it gradually. And use cracked corn, it's easy for them to consume and it isn't prone to the fatal fungus that rolled corn can get. I stir their feed up so they don't get big mouthfulls of cracked corn, it's kind of powdery and having had her go down twice choking on hay, I'm pretty careful to make sure she can't get big mouthfuls of anything that might get sucked up either into the back of her sinuses or clog up in her throat. Mixing it means each mouthful has different textures, so she doesn't get wads of food.
Have you checked the teeth, btw?