AllieBaba
Posted : 12/11/2009 7:00:16 AM
My current take on oats..as usual, conditional upon learning something new.
Unless oats are ROLLED, or your horse is very good at masticating, they essentially pass through as roughage only. So for elderly horses with issues chewing and/or digesting, chances are, the oats are acting only as roughage.
A friend of mine, who has young horses, was appalled when I told her I feed a gallon of dry cob (rolled corn, oats, and whatever else is in it. Maybe a little barley) to my horses. She was like, "they'll founder."
I see their crap. The oats go through whole. The birds eat it. The corn puts weight on. I haven't foundered a horse yet on oats. But I adjust the feed to the weather, and their ability to process it.
When I lived in Los Alamos, NM, at 7500 altitude, we fed either cracked or rolled corn during the winter. It generates heat. It can make them hot...horses who don't buck can and will buck when you feed them corn and they aren't being worked hard every day. But our horses were ridden every day, even in the winter, in 3 feet of snow. But corn generates heat and will put on weight. With older horses, rolled corn is great for putting on weight...when our horses were starved, we were buying cracked corn (the kind you feed to chickens) and that, among other things, was what was being withheld from them and led to their hideous weight loss.
Oats can founder them, if overfed. But if it's not rolled and they aren't great at chewing, it goes through whole. I probably wouldn't feed a gallon of dry cob to younger horses with good teeth and good tone. I might feed them half a cup a feeding, and some alfalfa, and possibly free choice grass hay.
I have yet to see a horse put on weight with oats. Corn will put weight on them, and increase their ability to generate heat.
Unfortunately, rolled corn isn't guaranteed safe when it leaves the processing center, as my feed store ppl told me (which is why they don't sell it). When stored in warm areas, it can generate (ergot?) and be deadly.
But since we didn't feed it in the summer, that was never an issue for us.
Slow and easy is the way to take extremely underweight horses. Don't overtax their hearts too quickly with too rich of feed right away. Stimulate their circulation. If you're stimulating circulation by grooming and easy exercise, you are also stimulating the circulation of their digestive tract. But too sudden will result in heart failure, because if they are in very poor shape, their hearts are weak and taxed already.
Honestly, I love corn. It will make their hearts race. You have to carefully gauge how much to use, but if you are able to do that (start with a handfull twice a day) they will put on weight and shine.