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 Buttered Noodles Snacker
Posts: 4377
        Location: NC | I see where a lot of people recently on the feed posts say they switched to feeding alfalfa or alfalfa/ricebran mixes. Do u have to feed a vitamin/mineral too? It makes sense that that would be healthy for a horse just wondering if it is balanced or if you have to add to it? |
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 Expert
Posts: 5290
     
| I feed 707 daily essentials cause it's cheap easy and covers all the bases. But I switched to renew gold and owner told me no need to feed 707 anymore |
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I just read the headlines
Posts: 4483
        
| I feed a purina 12:12 vitamin/mineral supplement to all but one who gets THE. I also feed renew gold but my hay is a medium quality so I just feel better feeding the minerals |
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 Accident Prone
Posts: 22277
          Location: 100 miles from Nowhere, AR | I keep loose minerals out anyway, but I do add stuff. One gets a basic vitamin/probiotic added, plus extra vit E. The other gets a digestive support and hoof supp. I use Smartpaks. The bulk of their diet is grass hay and pasture. Even when I'm feeding a commercial fortified feed, I never feed the recommended amount because of that. They were on Patriot Senior before this and the 2 I put on alfalfa/rice bran are looking way better than the ones that went on safe choice senior, so I'm swapping the others and soaking for the oldies.
Edited by Three 4 Luck 2015-03-28 7:09 PM
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Red Bull Agressive
Posts: 5981
         Location: North Dakota | I feed a squirt of liquid 747. I don't understand how it can be SO cheap and still work, but I haven't had any issues yet so I'll keep feeding it for now. I switched one of my geldings from Ultium to 1lb rice bran pellets, 4lbs alfalfa pellets, and a scoop of rice bran and alfalfa cubes soaked with his vitamins and any other necessary supplements and he's actually filled out more (despite not exercising) and I think he's gonna she'd out super shiny. |
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 Reaching for the stars....
Posts: 12704
     
| I switched out grain for the very high quality Montana alfalfa, just about pound for pound (approx 5 lbs per day). The remainder of my guys diet is a high quality local timothy hay (approx 15 lbs per day). I do use the purina loose mineral top dressed on (literally) a handful of feed once a day. I will also supplement fat in the form of rice bran and soy oil for my hard keepers and show horses, for both weight and shine. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 600
  Location: Oklahoma & Texas | I feed Alfalfa with Renew Gold . .i also feed free choice coastal hay |
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Blessed 
                      Location: Here | make sure your pellets come from a clean plant |
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Blessed 
                      Location: Here | BARRELHORSE USA - 2015-03-28 6:17 PM ADM bought out the old Moorman Feed Company and of course ADM had some college grad horse nutritionists that started messing with your horses school lunches... I believe her name was Michelle and ADM feeds went from containing groats and recognizable grains to processed human food waste like rice bran/hulls, beet pulp, floor sweepings, grain products and ethanol corn waste materials. This is when I stopped feeding their 14% Patriot feeds 5 years ago!! GroStrong Minerals is the best you can buy ... it is still on the old MoorMan vitamin to mineral ratio and the special way the minerals are chelated and produced in the same old mill for the past 40 years. I will continue to use GroStrong even tho ADM has doubled it's price .. i.e. 50 lb sack of loose GS used to cost <$35 now you only get a 25 lb bag ... If you want a balanced feed ration for growing, working, pasture dwellers and older horses you can't beat alfalfa, corn and whole oats ... as an overall balanced feed. The above is also easier on your feed bill. I use an all natural 3/8" beef feeder pellet of 60% alfalfa/40% ground corn at $8.20/50# bag and whole oats at $11.35/50# bag and one block of alfalfa hay along with 3-4 coastal Bermuda per day. Along with a handful of GroStrong minerals 3 x per week. .. NO OTHER SUPPLEMENTS!! Mixing a 5 gallon bucket with a standard 3 qt plastic scoop which will weigh 3 lbs... layer the feed by scooping 2 scoops of pellets, then one scoop of whole oats ... alternately till bucket is full (8 scoops = 24#'s) Now as you scoop the feed from bucket to horse feeder it gets mixed by itself. (including the block of alfalfa hay and 2-4 scoops per day it works out to be a 14% all natural feed that is very balanced and forces horse to chew and salivate while eating ... there is a lot of great things to say about digestion when a horse is forced to slow down and use his own spit to begin the digestion process. ... (the reason horses have great big jaw teeth are to chew with) .. lol I hope you noticed there is nothing in this feeding ration you can't pronounce and are not familiar with as a forever basic nutrition program for relaxed, growing babies or hard working horses... If you want your horse to have an oily even shinier coat that will glow in the dark ... add a half cup of whole flax seed to his daily feeding. Again.. the slime on the exterior of whole flax seeds aid in digestion and whole seeds will not turn rancid as the ground flax does and loses it's purpose. The only supplement I will use is an iron supplement on race track or speed event horses to build up their red blood cells so they have access to more oxygen when under hard exertion at the finish line. .. FYI a horse has almost a gallon of blood in his spleen that is used as a extra boost if it is well supplied with oxygen carrying red blood cells. This internal supply of oxygen ready red blood cells is what keeps a horse running when their breathing can't supply the oxygen they need to keep rolling... It is funny how things are today .. the heavy marketing ups the price on maybeso supplements and the cheapest and the most successful one with no marketing is the best iron supplement with a name difficult to forget ... RED CELL ... lol .. GOOD LUCK ... use the KISS program and old horse will never be happier or healthier ...
Grostrong isn't from an ionophore free place.... |
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 Money Eating Baggage Owner
Posts: 9586
       Location: Phoenix | Im curious as well. I'm feeding Bermuda grass hay and alfalfa (50/50) along with half pound of Renew Gold. I Can't decide if I want to do something with THE (w/ joint support), or just the 707 essentials.... |
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Expert
Posts: 2121
  Location: The Great Northwest | The best way to know what supplements you need to feed is to have the hay analyzed. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 507
 Location: Lost in the corn of Iowa. | We always keep minerals available to the horses in either tubs or a block. And my one mare is getting THE muscle mass with special blends. The other mare is a an easy keeper and just gets a joint supplement added into the daily feedings. |
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 Expert
Posts: 2457
      
| skye - 2015-03-28 10:08 PM The best way to know what supplements you need to feed is to have the hay analyzed. EXACTLY !!!^^^^
Analyze your hay - send it to somewhere like the SDSU feed analysis labs for a feed content analysis. Then you'll know exactly what your horse needs. It is very easy to feed too much or too little.
ETA - yes, I test my hay. Yes, I feed platinum performance as a mineral based supplement every day to my horses. They also have a free choice redmond rock sitting in the pen not being used but is available if they felt the need.
Edited by lindseylou2290 2015-03-29 9:54 AM
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 Veteran
Posts: 287
    
| I feed haystack special blend which is an alfalfa pellet blend, plus purina 12:12. I'm happy with it |
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  Twin Sister to Queen Boobie
Posts: 13315
       Location: East Tennessee but who knows?! | I have a question in regards to testing hay. For those of you that get it tested, what is the cost? Do you test several places in the field, and do you test each cutting? |
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 Owner of a ratting catting machine
Posts: 2258
    
| BARRELHORSE USA - 2015-03-28 6:17 PM
ADM bought out the old Moorman Feed Company and of course ADM had some college grad horse nutritionists that started messing with your horses school lunches... I believe her name was Michelle and ADM feeds went from containing groats and recognizable grains to processed human food waste like rice bran/hulls, beet pulp, floor sweepings, grain products and ethanol corn waste materials. This is when I stopped feeding their 14% Patriot feeds 5 years ago!!
GroStrong Minerals is the best you can buy ... it is still on the old MoorMan vitamin to mineral ratio and the special way the minerals are chelated and produced in the same old mill for the past 40 years. I will continue to use GroStrong even tho ADM has doubled it's price .. i.e. 50 lb sack of loose GS used to cost <$35 now you only get a 25 lb bag ...
If you want a balanced feed ration for growing, working, pasture dwellers and older horses you can't beat alfalfa, corn and whole oats ... as an overall balanced feed.
The above is also easier on your feed bill.
I use an all natural 3/8" beef feeder pellet of 60% alfalfa/40% ground corn at $8.20/50# bag
and whole oats at $11.35/50# bag and one block of alfalfa hay along with 3-4 coastal Bermuda per day. Along with a handful of GroStrong minerals 3 x per week. .. NO OTHER SUPPLEMENTS!!
Mixing a 5 gallon bucket with a standard 3 qt plastic scoop which will weigh 3 lbs... layer the feed by scooping 2 scoops of pellets, then one scoop of whole oats ... alternately till bucket is full (8 scoops = 24#'s) Now as you scoop the feed from bucket to horse feeder it gets mixed by itself.
(including the block of alfalfa hay and 2-4 scoops per day it works out to be a 14% all natural feed that is very balanced and forces horse to chew and salivate while eating ... there is a lot of great things to say about digestion when a horse is forced to slow down and use his own spit to begin the digestion process. ... (the reason horses have great big jaw teeth are to chew with) .. lol
I hope you noticed there is nothing in this feeding ration you can't pronounce and are not familiar with as a forever basic nutrition program for relaxed, growing babies or hard working horses...
If you want your horse to have an oily even shinier coat that will glow in the dark ... add a half cup of whole flax seed to his daily feeding. Again.. the slime on the exterior of whole flax seeds aid in digestion and whole seeds will not turn rancid as the ground flax does and loses it's purpose.
The only supplement I will use is an iron supplement on race track or speed event horses to build up their red blood cells so they have access to more oxygen when under hard exertion at the finish line. .. FYI a horse has almost a gallon of blood in his spleen that is used as a extra boost if it is well supplied with oxygen carrying red blood cells. This internal supply of oxygen ready red blood cells is what keeps a horse running when their breathing can't supply the oxygen they need to keep rolling... It is funny how things are today .. the heavy marketing ups the price on maybeso supplements and the cheapest and the most successful one with no marketing is the best iron supplement with a name difficult to forget ... RED CELL ... lol ..
GOOD LUCK ... use the KISS program and old horse will never be happier or healthier ...
Corn has been proven to cause inflammation in horses. Every little bit counts, I spend a lot of money in the battle against inflammation. I don't think it's a good idea to be feeding a proven contributing factor. Rice bran is a better alternative. It wasn't a viable option years ago, but now stabilizing processes are better, and it's safer.
I feed alfalfa pellets (Standlee), and Renew Gold. If they need extra fat and some carbs, they get 1-2 lbs of Ultium. Mine are also getting either OxyMax or SmartPak Mineral/Vitamin mix. Blood panels have always been good, so I don't worry about it. They do get a little salt added to feed, about a tablespoon. |
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 Buttered Noodles Snacker
Posts: 4377
        Location: NC | Anyone find switching to Alfalfa makes your horse hot? I was always told feeding Alfalfa would make a horse hot.... |
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 Veteran
Posts: 287
    
| No but we also feed barley hay year round and people say that makes them hot also. But we don't keep them stalled and excersize them appropriately too. |
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Expert
Posts: 1611
  
| HorsesNHarleys - 2015-03-30 8:36 AM
Anyone find switching to Alfalfa makes your horse hot? I was always told feeding Alfalfa would make a horse hot....
myth......it will actually calm a nervous horse down. Give them time to level out tho after you get them adjusted to the amount they need. |
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 Accident Prone
Posts: 22277
          Location: 100 miles from Nowhere, AR | HorsesNHarleys - 2015-03-30 7:36 AM Anyone find switching to Alfalfa makes your horse hot? I was always told feeding Alfalfa would make a horse hot....
No, but my horses' main source of feed is grass and grass hay. The alfalfa is supplemental, and the rice bran adds fat calories--they don't need much of either one. |
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 Expert
Posts: 2457
      
| Fairweather - 2015-03-29 12:46 PM I have a question in regards to testing hay. For those of you that get it tested, what is the cost? Do you test several places in the field, and do you test each cutting?
The cost will vary on the lab and the analysis that you are looking for. Average is about $20 per sample you send.
Generally, you core test a couple of bales from a "cutting" to get the average analysis for that field - I know UC Davis, Oregon State University, University of Minneosta, and South Dakota State all have feed analysis labs.
Here's a simple write up from OSU about pulling the sample and how to evaluate alfalfa. http://forages.oregonstate.edu/resources/publications/alfalfa_quality.pdf
Also - one from U of MN stating what they actually test when you send a sample - http://www.extension.umn.edu/agriculture/horse/nutrition/equine-hay-analysis/
Good Luck! |
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  That's White "Man" to You
Posts: 5515
 
| hammer_time - 2015-03-28 10:00 PM Im curious as well. I'm feeding Bermuda grass hay and alfalfa (50/50) along with half pound of Renew Gold. I Can't decide if I want to do something with THE (w/ joint support), or just the 707 essentials....
I'm feeding the same thing and chose to go with THE. I'm not sure what to attribute the results to but my stud looks really good on it. |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 492
      
| The alfalfa really has nothing to do with making a horse hot, it's the high starch grains that people feed that will make one "hot." |
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I Need a Xanax!
Posts: 2774
     
| Fairweather - 2015-03-29 12:46 PM
I have a question in regards to testing hay. For those of you that get it tested, what is the cost? Do you test several places in the field, and do you test each cutting?
I'm in TN too and have mine tested...I don't recommend using UT labs though. I have gotten some very wacky(inconsistent) results from them several times. I do test each cutting and take samples using a hay probe from at least 10-15 bales from each cutting. You can borrow the hay probe from your extension office. I have been using http://equi-analytical.com/ with very good results.....good results meaning "consistant" results. The cost is under $30 for a basic sample. |
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| Read my deleted post again and try to comprehend there is
no mention of using the pelletized GroStrong in any form
other than the loose pure granulated form.
And this also goes for supplements of various names that
are made from rejected human supplements that are re-pelletized
to be fed to your horses .. with good marketing skills feed and
vaccine companies have learned horse people will buy anything
and do things to their horses that would have them in prison
if they did it to their kids... lol
I enjoy seeing and reading other factual suggestions on horse
care and always wonder about those that use slurs and dizzy
little icons with no knowledgeable information to add to the conversation.
For those that like factual information ... I think you will enjoy these 3 links ..
Content of LOOSE ADM // MOORMAN GroStrong Minerals
http://www.admani.com/horse/Products/Horse%20Grostrong%20Minerals.h...
Nice straight forward article explaining some things you may see when
a lack of certain minerals affect your horses ..
http://www.neverbluefarm.com/articles/nutrition_article_1.html
IONOPHERE FREE PLANT AND HOW THIS ACCOMPLISHED ...
http://bluebonnetfeeds.com/is-your-horses-feed-safe-to-consume/
Have a good day
and use the KISS system to better the health of your horses..
Edited by BARRELHORSE USA 2015-03-31 2:24 AM
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 I too, shall remain nameless!
Posts: 2248
    Location: Wearing a winter coat...... | I feed this with my alfalfa hay. Horses look and feel great!
http://www.tributehorsefeeds.com/catalog/mares-and-foals/alfa-essen...
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I just read the headlines
Posts: 4483
        
| BARRELHORSE USA - 2015-03-31 1:56 AM
Read my deleted post again and try to comprehend there is
no mention of using the pelletized GroStrong in any form
other than the loose pure granulated form.
And this also goes for supplements of various names that
are made from rejected human supplements that are re-pelletized
to be fed to your horses .. with good marketing skills feed and
vaccine companies have learned horse people will buy anything
and do things to their horses that would have them in prison
if they did it to their kids... lol
I enjoy seeing and reading other factual suggestions on horse
care and always wonder about those that use slurs and dizzy
little icons with no knowledgeable information to add to the conversation.
For those that like factual information ... I think you will enjoy these 3 links ..
Content of LOOSE ADM // MOORMAN GroStrong Minerals
http://www.admani.com/horse/Products/Horse%20Grostrong%20Minerals.h...
Nice straight forward article explaining some things you may see when
a lack of certain minerals affect your horses ..
http://www.neverbluefarm.com/articles/nutrition_article_1.html
IONOPHERE FREE PLANT AND HOW THIS ACCOMPLISHED ...
http://bluebonnetfeeds.com/is-your-horses-feed-safe-to-consume/
Have a good day
and use the KISS system to better the health of your horses..
Do they not use the same equipment for mixing the loose minerals that they use for mixing the medicated minerals and feed? I am confused because I understood that it was all the same equipment. If I am mistaken, I would like to know. |
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| GLP - 2015-03-31 9:47 AM
BARRELHORSE USA - 2015-03-31 1:56 AM
Read my deleted post again and try to comprehend there is
no mention of using the pelletized GroStrong in any form
other than the loose pure granulated form.
And this also goes for supplements of various names that
are made from rejected human supplements that are re-pelletized
to be fed to your horses .. with good marketing skills feed and
vaccine companies have learned horse people will buy anything
and do things to their horses that would have them in prison
if they did it to their kids... lol
I enjoy seeing and reading other factual suggestions on horse
care and always wonder about those that use slurs and dizzy
little icons with no knowledgeable information to add to the conversation.
For those that like factual information ... I think you will enjoy these 3 links ..
Content of LOOSE ADM // MOORMAN GroStrong Minerals
http://www.admani.com/horse/Products/Horse%20Grostrong%20Minerals.h...
Nice straight forward article explaining some things you may see when
a lack of certain minerals affect your horses ..
http://www.neverbluefarm.com/articles/nutrition_article_1.html
IONOPHERE FREE PLANT AND HOW THIS ACCOMPLISHED ...
http://bluebonnetfeeds.com/is-your-horses-feed-safe-to-consume/
Have a good day
and use the KISS system to better the health of your horses..
Do they not use the same equipment for mixing the loose minerals that they use for mixing the medicated minerals and feed? I am confused because I understood that it was all the same equipment. If I am mistaken, I would like to know.
Granulated minerals .. think of it as bulk fertilizers .. it comes in this form and is
added to feeds they pelletize with gluten, grain products etc which makes them look
like regular pelleted feed instead of the typical red loose minerals that look like coarsely
ground up salt.
The minerals are shipped usually by rail cars to major plants that make pelleted feeds
and put into individual hoppers so they can put the recipe for making particular pellets
for various livestock.
Minerals are bagged and shipped from the plant that is processing only the
primary minerals and vitamins and not at the plants that do the pelleted form
of mineral supplements. |
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 I'm Cooler Offline
Posts: 6387
        Location: Pacific Northwest | My horses get beet pulp and alfalfa pellets along with timothy hay, and I add Horse Guard multivitamin to the pellets. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 550
  
| Fairweather - 2015-03-29 1:46 PM
I have a question in regards to testing hay. For those of you that get it tested, what is the cost? Do you test several places in the field, and do you test each cutting?
Our Ag Dept will test. It is only $10, plus a couple of bucks to ship it.
A gallon size freezer bag, a core sample from several bales from multiple places in the field, and mail it in a big envelop. They email or mail the results to you in a week or so. |
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I just read the headlines
Posts: 4483
        
| BARRELHORSE USA - 2015-03-31 12:15 PM
GLP - 2015-03-31 9:47 AM
BARRELHORSE USA - 2015-03-31 1:56 AM
Read my deleted post again and try to comprehend there is
no mention of using the pelletized GroStrong in any form
other than the loose pure granulated form.
And this also goes for supplements of various names that
are made from rejected human supplements that are re-pelletized
to be fed to your horses .. with good marketing skills feed and
vaccine companies have learned horse people will buy anything
and do things to their horses that would have them in prison
if they did it to their kids... lol
I enjoy seeing and reading other factual suggestions on horse
care and always wonder about those that use slurs and dizzy
little icons with no knowledgeable information to add to the conversation.
For those that like factual information ... I think you will enjoy these 3 links ..
Content of LOOSE ADM // MOORMAN GroStrong Minerals
http://www.admani.com/horse/Products/Horse%20Grostrong%20Minerals.h...
Nice straight forward article explaining some things you may see when
a lack of certain minerals affect your horses ..
http://www.neverbluefarm.com/articles/nutrition_article_1.html
IONOPHERE FREE PLANT AND HOW THIS ACCOMPLISHED ...
http://bluebonnetfeeds.com/is-your-horses-feed-safe-to-consume/
Have a good day
and use the KISS system to better the health of your horses..
Do they not use the same equipment for mixing the loose minerals that they use for mixing the medicated minerals and feed? I am confused because I understood that it was all the same equipment. If I am mistaken, I would like to know.
Granulated minerals .. think of it as bulk fertilizers .. it comes in this form and is
added to feeds they pelletize with gluten, grain products etc which makes them look
like regular pelleted feed instead of the typical red loose minerals that look like coarsely
ground up salt.
The minerals are shipped usually by rail cars to major plants that make pelleted feeds
and put into individual hoppers so they can put the recipe for making particular pellets
for various livestock.
Minerals are bagged and shipped from the plant that is processing only the
primary minerals and vitamins and not at the plants that do the pelleted form
of mineral supplements.
Thank you that was what I was wanting to know |
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Member
Posts: 36

| We have very nice alfalfa in the NW. I feed alfalfa, all the can eat pasture or grass hay depending on the time of year, I used to feed a mix but was more grass now I am feeding more alfalfa and was able to simplify everything else. Up until this winter I fed expensive supplements, omelene. The list goes on. I decided to simplify. Mine now get a couple lbs of oats, daily gold, and their tight joints plus with a little oil. I am about 4 months into it. My horses look awesome, are running great, much calmer, and all blood work is great. Even my hard keeper is fat. Good quality alfalfa will do a lot for a horse.
Edited by TightJointsPlus 2015-03-31 2:17 PM
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 Buttered Noodles Snacker
Posts: 4377
        Location: NC | Is everyone feeding Alfalfa pellets? Or are we talking bales of Alfalfa? I was thinking of replacing Alfalfa pellets for my grain. They are on pasture and fescue round bales 24/7. |
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 Hugs to You
Posts: 7550
     Location: In The Land of Cotton | BARRELHORSE USA - 2015-03-31 2:56 AM Read my deleted post again and try to comprehend there is no mention of using the pelletized GroStrong in any form other than the loose pure granulated form. And this also goes for supplements of various names that are made from rejected human supplements that are re-pelletized to be fed to your horses .. with good marketing skills feed and vaccine companies have learned horse people will buy anything and do things to their horses that would have them in prison if they did it to their kids... lol I enjoy seeing and reading other factual suggestions on horse care and always wonder about those that use slurs and dizzy little icons with no knowledgeable information to add to the conversation. For those that like factual information ... I think you will enjoy these 3 links .. Content of LOOSE ADM // MOORMAN GroStrong Minerals http://www.admani.com/horse/Products/Horse%20Grostrong%20Minerals.h... Nice straight forward article explaining some things you may see when a lack of certain minerals affect your horses .. http://www.neverbluefarm.com/articles/nutrition_article_1.html IONOPHERE FREE PLANT AND HOW THIS ACCOMPLISHED ... http://bluebonnetfeeds.com/is-your-horses-feed-safe-to-consume/ Have a good day and use the KISS system to better the health of your horses..
While I actually love the Gro Strong Minerals from ADM - since I had the poisoning at my home (ADM came to my home) and acted like I and the rest of us with contaminated feed are idoits - I refuse to buy their minerals.
My personal opinion is - horse people need to stop supporting companies who choose to look the other way and think we are a bunch of dumb asses and they can keep on with their bad manufacturing practices. The only way to make them change is through the pocket book.
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Rad Dork
Posts: 5218
   Location: Oklahoma | HorsesNHarleys - 2015-03-31 2:20 PM Is everyone feeding Alfalfa pellets? Or are we talking bales of Alfalfa? I was thinking of replacing Alfalfa pellets for my grain. They are on pasture and fescue round bales 24/7.
I feed flakes from square bales. They have 24/7 access to bermuda grass, but once they finish that round bale up I am going to get them a 3x3x8 alfalfa bale and set in their round bale feeder and just buy square bales for hauling since grass is coming up and they prefer that over hay. They just look so much better on alfalfa than anything else.
Unless you have a horse that just can't chew the cubes and has to have the pellets I'd go for the cubes and soak them. The pellets don't offer as near as much fiber/roughage content. |
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 Jr. Detective
      Location: Beggs, OK | BARRELHORSE USA - 2015-03-31 12:15 PM GLP - 2015-03-31 9:47 AM BARRELHORSE USA - 2015-03-31 1:56 AM Read my deleted post again and try to comprehend there is no mention of using the pelletized GroStrong in any form other than the loose pure granulated form. And this also goes for supplements of various names that are made from rejected human supplements that are re-pelletized to be fed to your horses .. with good marketing skills feed and vaccine companies have learned horse people will buy anything and do things to their horses that would have them in prison if they did it to their kids... lol I enjoy seeing and reading other factual suggestions on horse care and always wonder about those that use slurs and dizzy little icons with no knowledgeable information to add to the conversation. For those that like factual information ... I think you will enjoy these 3 links .. Content of LOOSE ADM // MOORMAN GroStrong Minerals http://www.admani.com/horse/Products/Horse%20Grostrong%20Minerals.h... Nice straight forward article explaining some things you may see when a lack of certain minerals affect your horses .. http://www.neverbluefarm.com/articles/nutrition_article_1.html IONOPHERE FREE PLANT AND HOW THIS ACCOMPLISHED ... http://bluebonnetfeeds.com/is-your-horses-feed-safe-to-consume/ Have a good day and use the KISS system to better the health of your horses.. Do they not use the same equipment for mixing the loose minerals that they use for mixing the medicated minerals and feed? I am confused because I understood that it was all the same equipment. If I am mistaken, I would like to know. Granulated minerals .. think of it as bulk fertilizers .. it comes in this form and is added to feeds they pelletize with gluten, grain products etc which makes them look like regular pelleted feed instead of the typical red loose minerals that look like coarsely ground up salt. The minerals are shipped usually by rail cars to major plants that make pelleted feeds and put into individual hoppers so they can put the recipe for making particular pellets for various livestock. Minerals are bagged and shipped from the plant that is processing only the primary minerals and vitamins and not at the plants that do the pelleted form of mineral supplements.
It doesn't matter what the process is...if the facility mixes medicated feeds there is a risk of contamination. Even the bagging process is at risk.
Continuing to support a company that has little to no regard for the safety or welfare of our horses is unconscionable. Their handling of the contaminated feed in the SE United States is enough to keep me from ever buying another ADM product again. I will continue to educate others on the toxic effects of residual drug carryover for the rest of my life. No amount of an ionophore is "safe" for a horse to consume.
Random colics, digestive issues, hind end weakness, muscle wasting, chronic ulcers, liver disease, heart failure, neurotoxicity, impaired performance, etc can all be attributed to chronic low level exposure to ionophores. When these products are being produced in the same facility as horse feed your horses safety is left up to the reliability of the human in charge. |
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 Veteran
Posts: 189
   
| For those of you feeding alfalfa pellets are you substituting them for your grain? Do you soak the pellets for easier digestion..the seem pretty hard. |
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Queen Bean of Ponyland
Posts: 24953
             Location: WYOMING | I feed alfalfa pellets in place of grain. Its about all my allergic horse can eat. I mix in some Timothy pellets and rice bran pellets also. Pasture 24/7. Sometimes I switch out for soaked alfalfa cubes. This has worked SO good I changed everyone to it. Oh no I dont soak the pellets but I do feed ground level in a big tub so there is less likelyhood to scarf them down amd choke. |
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 Veteran
Posts: 189
   
| Thanks geronabean! |
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