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Member
Posts: 37

| Hey everyone! I was wondering what were some of your favorite oils to feed? I got a bottle of some Oxygen oil and have just been giving that and they really like it but I was just wondering what else is out there? |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 425
     Location: California | I like DAC oil. |
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 Veteran
Posts: 178
   
| I love the DAC oil |
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Expert
Posts: 1207
  
| Shine from Bluebonnet. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 589
   
| Cocosoya Oil by Uckele
WONDERFUL stuff that isn't expensive |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 559
  
| I just started using rice bran oil ! |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 1079
    Location: MN | I love Healthy Coat. |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| I use to be a die hard dac oil user, but got tired of paying for shipping. I switched to healthy coat and love it. I can see a big difference in their coats. |
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 Blond Bombshell..
Posts: 6628
     Location: Hill Country of TEXAS!! | What is the difference between the DAC oil and the Oxygen Mega Oil? |
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Member
Posts: 7

| It's not an oil but MVP has a product called Pro-Weight that is a daily supplement as well that will put on weight and shine. It also has probiotics in it. MVP also has a supplement called Omegas that has both Omega 3 and Omega 6, coconut oil and flax seed for weight gain as well as shine and overall health. If you would be interested in trying either or both, you can message me
Edited by kma 2016-04-21 9:39 AM
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 851
      Location: West Texas | I am not familiar with every brand of oil out there but here is some basic info, from my prospective.
All feed ingredients contain fatty acids in their fat content. Furthermore, all oils and fats contains Omega 6 and 3 fatty acids (this is really a shameful marketing tactic when it says "Contains Omega 6 and 3 fatty acids"). Omega 6 cause inflammation and Omega 3 control inflammation. Both are necessary for health, but because most feed sources are higher in Omega 6 than 3, I think it very important for an oil or fat source to be higher in Omega 3 than 6. There are "very" few oils that have this property: fish oil, flax oil and seeds, chia seeds, camelina oil, mainly. "ALL other fats and oils are high in Omega 6 fatty acids and can contribute to inflammation" Some are worse than others with corn oil generally being the worst. Another point to make here is that oils contain very little nutrients in general, compared to ingredients where the oils are derived from in the first place. I am not a big high fat fan and like my fats to come from food sources instead of just the oil itself, for higher nutrition values.
Generally, oil supplements are expensive ($/calorie) and high Omega 3 oils are more expensive than high Omega 6 oils. This is why "Most" oils are a combination of oils with the majority being a vegetable oil of some sort. This is done to cut down the cost, to boost margin, or a combination of both. Often times marginal amounts of high omega 3 oils will be added (usually flax), but this is simply for marketing purposes as there is little benefit to the overall oil for doing so. For example, I believe Healthy Coat is mostly soybean oil with an overall 7:1 Omega 6:3 ratio. I would not recommend this oil or other like it, most oils. There are a few oils that are out there with favorable Omega 3:6 ratios. Many of them are pure flax or camelina oil.
The downside to all oils is there relatively high expense, low nutrient content, and only minor effectiveness (specifically weight gain) due to low feeding rates of 1 to 2 ounces. I find it much more nutritional and cost effective to feed a high fat source such as flax seeds. Other sources of fat such as Rice bran are also higher in Omega 6 than 3. Coconut oil is also a much better choice than vegetable oils, although it does not contain Omega fatty acids.
Edited by Tdove 2016-04-21 1:49 PM
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 795
      Location: GODS country | Dash4KJ - 2016-04-21 9:13 AM
What is the difference between the DAC oil and the Oxygen Mega Oil?
Mega Oil is a high quality cold processed soybean and flax oil blend with liquid Oxy-Gen suspended. |
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 Captain Of The Prude Broom
Posts: 2153
    Location: cincinnati, oh | Has anyone tried the Equine Omega Gold? Are there additional benefits with it that I won't get from just feeding flax seed? |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 596
    Location: Somewhere in the middle of nowhere | skeeter7 - 2016-04-21 1:02 PM Has anyone tried the Equine Omega Gold? Are there additional benefits with it that I won't get from just feeding flax seed?
I wondered this as well. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 851
      Location: West Texas | I have looked into Equine Omega Gold. My answer is probably not. Flax seed has much more nutrients than any oil can provide you alone, along with antioxidants and gut health affects. The one area that EOG has that flax does not is naturally occurring vitamin E, which you may or may not find beneficiary to your existing feed program. Lastly, EOG is not as economically attractive generally compared to flax seeds.
If you were specifically looking for an Oil, EOG would be a much better choice than the other oils out there, in my opinion. I think it would be my top choice as far as oils go. Again, I am not much of an oil person, but if that is your preference. You should look into it. There are a few other brands I think as well that are similar.
Edited by Tdove 2016-04-21 2:45 PM
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 964
       Location: Alberta, Canada | I feed coconut oil along with rolled flaxseed as per my blood analysis guy. Works for us. |
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 Veteran
Posts: 210
 
| I feed Excel EQ oil |
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 Duct Tape Can't Fix Stupid
Posts: 2749
     Location: Warsaw,NY | I currently feed the DAC oil, in the past I have used cocosoya oil and loved that too |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 682
     Location: Northwest | Just started using Platinum Performance Healthy Weight oil on my old guy. I looked at quite a few before choosing it. IMO the Oxygen Mega Oil is quite $$. |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| Tdove - 2016-04-21 2:43 PM
I have looked into Equine Omega Gold. My answer is probably not. Flax seed has much more nutrients than any oil can provide you alone, along with antioxidants and gut health affects. The one area that EOG has that flax does not is naturally occurring vitamin E, which you may or may not find beneficiary to your existing feed program. Lastly, EOG is not as economically attractive generally compared to flax seeds.
If you were specifically looking for an Oil, EOG would be a much better choice than the other oils out there, in my opinion. I think it would be my top choice as far as oils go. Again, I am not much of an oil person, but if that is your preference. You should look into it. There are a few other brands I think as well that are similar.
That oil is $64 a gallon.. wow! |
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 Expert
Posts: 1367
      Location: mi | I like an oil for its coat and weight benefits but also it helps when you have a supplement sifter. Kind of hides the powders and makes them stick. I could just feed Rice bran and probably feed it cheaper but I went this route.
http://www.statelinetack.com/item/mccauleys-all-natural-rice-bran-oil/SLT901373/?srccode=GPSLT&gclid=Cj0KEQjwl-e4BRCwqeWkv8TWqOoBEiQAMocbPwkupDHWdc4gLH6iBT9UNib2_hNMdvgmlvs6lHcCY8MaAt2g8P8HAQ&kwid=productads-adid^40184828028-device^c-plaid^105400482828-sku^127819-adType^PLA |
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boon
Posts: 2

| Tdove - 2016-04-21 10:23 AM
I am not familiar with every brand of oil out there but here is some basic info, from my prospective.
All feed ingredients contain fatty acids in their fat content. Furthermore, all oils and fats contains Omega 6 and 3 fatty acids (this is really a shameful marketing tactic when it says "Contains Omega 6 and 3 fatty acids"). Omega 6 cause inflammation and Omega 3 control inflammation. Both are necessary for health, but because most feed sources are higher in Omega 6 than 3, I think it very important for an oil or fat source to be higher in Omega 3 than 6. There are "very" few oils that have this property: fish oil, flax oil and seeds, chia seeds, camelina oil, mainly. "ALL other fats and oils are high in Omega 6 fatty acids and can contribute to inflammation" Some are worse than others with corn oil generally being the worst. Another point to make here is that oils contain very little nutrients in general, compared to ingredients where the oils are derived from in the first place. I am not a big high fat fan and like my fats to come from food sources instead of just the oil itself, for higher nutrition values.
Generally, oil supplements are expensive ($/calorie) and high Omega 3 oils are more expensive than high Omega 6 oils. This is why "Most" oils are a combination of oils with the majority being a vegetable oil of some sort. This is done to cut down the cost, to boost margin, or a combination of both. Often times marginal amounts of high omega 3 oils will be added (usually flax), but this is simply for marketing purposes as there is little benefit to the overall oil for doing so. For example, I believe Healthy Coat is mostly soybean oil with an overall 7:1 Omega 6:3 ratio. I would not recommend this oil or other like it, most oils. There are a few oils that are out there with favorable Omega 3:6 ratios. Many of them are pure flax or camelina oil.
The downside to all oils is there relatively high expense, low nutrient content, and only minor effectiveness (specifically weight gain) due to low feeding rates of 1 to 2 ounces. I find it much more nutritional and cost effective to feed a high fat source such as flax seeds. Other sources of fat such as Rice bran are also higher in Omega 6 than 3. Coconut oil is also a much better choice than vegetable oils, although it does not contain Omega fatty acids.
how much flax seed would you feed daily?
Thanks |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 851
      Location: West Texas | 4-8 ounces daily. Pros and cons of all forms. |
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