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Expert
Posts: 2685
     
| Please choose the grain you feed and comment with how much per day and any supplements you add to it.
Assuming all of the horses get free choice hay. |
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Expert
Posts: 2685
     
| I feed Blue Bonnet Equilene, 10# day to my thin mare and 6# day to my normal keeping mare. I don't add anything to the normal keeper, I add oil and a digestive supp to the hard keeping mare. Both get free choice hay, hard keeper gets free choice grass also. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 1035
  Location: TN | I have been feeding my easy keeper a low starch locally milled feed (1/2 scoop 2x/day) and when he was running I added THE Muscle Mass with ulcer prevent. Tomorrow I will be starting my 16 year old horse on Purina Equine Senior Active with Forco added. The senior active is expensive per bag but you don't have to feed much so it works out to not really be that expensive. I liked the reviews on here and the higher protein, fat, and low starch. I'll see how that goes and then in about a month I'll add Muscle Mass. I wanted to start the Forco and MM at different times so I'd get a better idea of what the feed and forco were doing on their own prior to the MM. I want to keep it as simple and cost effective as possible. |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| I feed purina strategy healthy edge, forco, THE MM,and a shot of healthy coat to stick. I'm happy with it. But, I'm thinking about giving the Kool Speed a try soon. I'm looking for a drier feed, not so moist because where I live it gets very hot and humid and my feed room absolutely heats up and I'm afraid of molding, the strategy is really moist and I'm finding more and more big chunks stuck together. |
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 Owner of a ratting catting machine
Posts: 2258
    
| Free choice alfalfa cubes, 3 lbs oats, 1 lb rice bran 2x daily for my hard keeping race bred.
18 lbs alfalfa cubes, 1 lb oats 2x daily for my easy keeper.
Formula 707 Daily Essentials for both.
That's it. |
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 Jr. Detective
      Location: Beggs, OK | My mare is getting 18# of Omnis CP Cubes per day....no additional feed or hay. She's on OE Flex for joint health and gets Redmond's daily.
(13006712_10153359862551755_7048510048626245935_n.jpg)
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Regular
Posts: 52
 
| I have tried a variety of feeds, 12% sweet feed, safe choice, strategy, ultium, omelene, progressive nutrition, ration balancer by Purina and nutrena. Xtn. Pro force fuel. There are probably more than I can't remember.
By far my favorite feed is triple crown senior. I fed it at a minimum of 5 lbs per day.
I've recently switched to an "all natural" diet for my horses. I feed 3lbs min alfalfa, 1 lb oats, 1 cup flax seed.
I've also been happy with xtn by nutrena.
My horses look and feel the best on the 3 feeds I listed above. Keep in mind they're easy keepers so rations may need adjusting depending on the horses needs.
Out of curiosity I'm giving renew gold a try. Hoping it's as good as everyone says. |
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Expert
Posts: 3514
  
| Kool Speed Plus, Vitalize High Performance and Equine.Regen. Poly Glycan every other week and OE Flex |
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 Money Eating Baggage Owner
Posts: 9586
       Location: Phoenix | Renew Gold. I feed 1 lb but only for the added flax benefit. I fed my horse 1/2 lb all last year and he looked equally as good. I also feed Platinum Performance but am considering quitting because I'm not seeing any amazing benefits from it.
I think alfalfa is an important part of a horse's diet. |
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I just read the headlines
Posts: 4483
        
| 10 lbs. Omni cubes, Cur Ost supplement and my gelding started Adequan- he has a small hock spur. |
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 Expert
Posts: 2128
  
| Free choice alfalfa...nothing else |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 889
      
| Tribute Kalm N EZ, MVP 6-way, Red Cell, grass/alfalfa mix hay |
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 Serious Snap Trapper
Posts: 4275
       Location: In The Snow, AZ | I was feeding 2# rice bran, a few lbs soaked beet pulp, Cool Calories, Noni Formula 1, and THE MM to my OTTB that is thin and gangly looking.
A few weeks ago I found a CONSISTENT Renew Gold supplier (I couldn't ever find it to feed consistently). I dropped the rice bran, halved the beet pulp, chucked the Cool Calories and Noni. He's now getting 1-1-2 lbs Renew Gold and MM. Putting on noticeable weight already and shining up... FINALLY.
I'll stick with my Renew Gold.
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Veteran
Posts: 118

| Mine are on a mixture of Chaffhaye, whole oats, whole flax, supplemental Coolstance and AE detox. They get a big flake of alfalfa with their morning meal along with Brome hay, have free choice to Redmond salt and Sea90 and have access to pasture 24/7. All four look incredible!  |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 1079
    Location: MN | Im feeding a mixture of Triple Crown Complete and Roasted to Perfection right now along with MVP Exceed 6-way. Love the way my guy looks right now! He gets 3lbs total once a day along with alfalfa/mix hay and on pasture 24/7.
ETA This pic was over a month ago coming off of winter. I need to get a more current one as he has shed off and is super slick and shiney! 
Edited by Kay-DRacing. 2016-04-20 10:53 AM
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 Zeal Queen
Posts: 3826
       Location: TEXAS | scwebster - 2016-04-20 10:09 AM Free choice alfalfa...nothing else
Isn't that hard on their kidneys? |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 851
      Location: West Texas | slacy09 - 2016-04-20 11:00 AM
scwebster - 2016-04-20 10:09 AM Free choice alfalfa...nothing else
Isn't that hard on their kidneys?
No, that is largely a myth. Many, many horses fed this way.
Edited by Tdove 2016-04-20 11:32 AM
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 Expert
Posts: 1898
       
| 1# Renew Gold, 2oz Forco and 1 lb per 100 lbs body weight straight alfalfa.
Edited by cyount2009 2016-04-20 12:00 PM
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 Expert
Posts: 5293
     
| Anyone worry about increased colic risk of feeding 100% alfalfa? I always throw in some orchard grass since I do not have pasture. All my vets have ever said is to give them some grass to help keep things moving. and NOT Bermuda under any circumstances. I guess the Bermuda we have in CA is the Bad kind. lol |
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 Balance Beam and more...
Posts: 11511
    Location: 31 lengths farms | I picked the Renew Gold, Alfalfa pellets and oats, but in reality I feed Timothy Pellets since my mare cannot have Alfalfa and I didn't want to add more to the list...I add their Cur-ost and the mare with kidney issues also get her ENC kidney herb and all get ACV. |
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 Expert
Posts: 1898
       
| FLITASTIC - 2016-04-20 11:52 AM
Anyone worry about increased colic risk of feeding 100% alfalfa? I always throw in some orchard grass since I do not have pasture. All my vets have ever said is to give them some grass to help keep things moving. and NOT Bermuda under any circumstances. I guess the Bermuda we have in CA is the Bad kind. lol
We have a few colics here and there but it is usually when we get our goofy weather, where we have weeks of highs in the mid to high 70s and then a cold snap with snow and highs in the low to mid 40s. When that happens they don't drink enough water and viola, colic. Our local vets actually prepare for those weather snaps because they see an influx of colicky horses on those weeks at the clinic.
The last thing we had colic (knock on wood) was our 30 something year old mini almost 3 years ago and he was on straight orchard grass. I think he was just old and it was the start of his decline.
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 Scorpions R Us
Posts: 9586
       Location: So. Cali. | I've always been a safechoice fan. Have never had a complaint with the quality of feed, only on the price increase. I currently feed my mare Safechoice Special Care due to a history of muscle spasms. She looks great, covered in dapples.
Recently was talked into feeding Total Equine. So far, really like it and so are the horses. Probably only been on it a month now and their coats are looking darker and naturally shiney.
I should add their diet is soaked beet pulp twice a day with alfalfa pellets.
Edited by Three*C*Champs 2016-04-20 12:23 PM
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 Expert
Posts: 5293
     
| cyount2009 - 2016-04-20 10:14 AM
FLITASTIC - 2016-04-20 11:52 AM
Anyone worry about increased colic risk of feeding 100% alfalfa? I always throw in some orchard grass since I do not have pasture. All my vets have ever said is to give them some grass to help keep things moving. and NOT Bermuda under any circumstances. I guess the Bermuda we have in CA is the Bad kind. lol
We have a few colics here and there but it is usually when we get our goofy weather, where we have weeks of highs in the mid to high 70s and then a cold snap with snow and highs in the low to mid 40s. When that happens they don't drink enough water and viola, colic. Our local vets actually prepare for those weather snaps because they see an influx of colicky horses on those weeks at the clinic.
The last thing we had colic (knock on wood ) was our 30 something year old mini almost 3 years ago and he was on straight orchard grass. I think he was just old and it was the start of his decline.
I agree. I watch the weather very closely and start giving electrolytes few days out of weather changes and I NEVER use automatic watering systems. I want to know exactly how much each horse is drinking. There are those systems with a meter and I tried that once and my horse broke it and pulled it off and tried to eat it.. so old fashioned it is.. lol Mental note of trough level and check it as soon as I get home. Pinch test on the neck for hydration. |
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Expert
Posts: 3514
  
| My vets have always said to feed alfalfa to colic prone horses. That is the first hay offered after colic surgery. I feed Alfalfa and Timothy. Bermuda will cause one to impact due to it being so fine stemmed. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 929
     
| FLITASTIC - 2016-04-20 9:52 AM
Anyone worry about increased colic risk of feeding 100% alfalfa? I always throw in some orchard grass since I do not have pasture. All my vets have ever said is to give them some grass to help keep things moving. and NOT Bermuda under any circumstances. I guess the Bermuda we have in CA is the Bad kind. lol
The bermuda around here will CAUSE them to colic. They say it's long cut but it binds them up. |
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 Balance Beam and more...
Posts: 11511
    Location: 31 lengths farms | I remember a few years ago when I was trading cleaning stalls for reined cow horse lessons the owners wife was pulling the hose up and down the alley and watering 26 stalls by hand, I said something about "didn 't these stalls used to have automatic waters in them?" and she said "yep, first thing I pulled out when we moved in, I will not use an automatic waterer. Knowing if they drank or not will almost always let you know there is trouble before it shows." |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| I have got to find something else to feed..I like the strategy healthy edge but it's really moist and Temps are heating up here, it felt like a sauna in my feed room yesterday and I'm afraid of mold. I don't feed very much of it but I only buy 2 bags a week so that puts me having to go in town every week to buy it. I'm afraid to "stock up" on it because the moisture and heat/humidity are not a good combo. I've looked into regular strategy but it didn't get very good reviews. Nutrena is not an option for me. Renew Gold is way too high here and can be difficult to keep in stock. I'm leaning towards the Kool speed plus, sorta, not because I'm worried about my horses having ulcers, but I like it's from an ionophore free mill and the high fiber and high fat and it's a dry feed. Any other suggestions? I'm on a budget too and I have a very choke prone horse so I have to wet his feed down. |
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 Hugs to You
Posts: 7551
     Location: In The Land of Cotton | FLITASTIC - 2016-04-20 12:52 PM Anyone worry about increased colic risk of feeding 100% alfalfa? I always throw in some orchard grass since I do not have pasture. All my vets have ever said is to give them some grass to help keep things moving. and NOT Bermuda under any circumstances. I guess the Bermuda we have in CA is the Bad kind. lol
All we feed is bermuda, Tift 85. Which is the larger stem. I guess CA is screwed up. LOL.
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| 3canstorun - 2016-04-21 7:05 AM
FLITASTIC - 2016-04-20 12:52 PM Anyone worry about increased colic risk of feeding 100% alfalfa? I always throw in some orchard grass since I do not have pasture. All my vets have ever said is to give them some grass to help keep things moving. and NOT Bermuda under any circumstances. I guess the Bermuda we have in CA is the Bad kind. lol
All we feed is bermuda, Tift 85. Which is the larger stem. I guess CA is screwed up. LOL.
Bermuda is all we've ever fed and occasionally some alfalfa if I can get my hands on it. |
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Hungarian Midget Woman
    Location: Midwest | yearling: one 3 qt scoop 2x daily Ultium growth, grass hay with a small amount of alfalfa in there
19 yr old gelding I run: one 3 qt scoop 2x daily Locally milled 14% pellet (the barn's feed), 1-2 lb alfalfa pellets once daily, 0.5-1 lb amplify once daily, and the same hay as the yearling. MSM, pentosan for joints, psyllium for hx of sand colic. He is my special diva that's a hard keeper. I blame it on the TB sire lol
ETA Pentosan is 6cc IM once a week when running, less often when not running (winter)
Edited by barrelracr131 2016-04-21 7:19 AM
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 Maine-iac
Posts: 3334
      Location: Got Lobsta? | Renew Gold 1 pound per day and alfalfa pellets - 14 yr old & 3 year old Renew Gold 1.5 pounds per day for 26, 27 and 32 year old with severe cushings. Free access to Timothy hay |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 595
    Location: North Dakota | Whole oats, whole flax, free choice grass hay, 2 flakes alfalfa once a day and Cur-OST supplements. Clean and simple! |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| Anyone ever feed blue bonnet natural blend performance? |
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I just read the headlines
Posts: 4483
        
| want2chase3 - 2016-04-21 9:56 AM
Anyone ever feed blue bonnet natural blend performance?
A friend did. She had a 17 yr. old Reiner she fed it to. He looked and felt great on it. But the warehouse kept sending old feed down here, even after the feed store brought it to their attention. So the feed store quit carrying it. |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| GLP - 2016-04-21 3:23 PM
want2chase3 - 2016-04-21 9:56 AM
Anyone ever feed blue bonnet natural blend performance?
A friend did. She had a 17 yr. old Reiner she fed it to. He looked and felt great on it. But the warehouse kept sending old feed down here, even after the feed store brought it to their attention. So the feed store quit carrying it.
Hmmm. Well I talked to the feed store today and they are putting in an order for me on monday, sure hope it's fresh! Looking forward to getting my boys started on it. |
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I just read the headlines
Posts: 4483
        
| want2chase3 - 2016-04-22 11:48 AM
GLP - 2016-04-21 3:23 PM
want2chase3 - 2016-04-21 9:56 AM
Anyone ever feed blue bonnet natural blend performance?
A friend did. She had a 17 yr. old Reiner she fed it to. He looked and felt great on it. But the warehouse kept sending old feed down here, even after the feed store brought it to their attention. So the feed store quit carrying it.
Hmmm. Well I talked to the feed store today and they are putting in an order for me on monday, sure hope it's fresh! Looking forward to getting my boys started on it.
Check the dates on the bags before you buy. She was so disappointed. Her horses looked really good on it, and felt great, too. I hope it works out for you. |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| GLP - 2016-04-22 11:54 AM
want2chase3 - 2016-04-22 11:48 AM
GLP - 2016-04-21 3:23 PM
want2chase3 - 2016-04-21 9:56 AM
Anyone ever feed blue bonnet natural blend performance?
A friend did. She had a 17 yr. old Reiner she fed it to. He looked and felt great on it. But the warehouse kept sending old feed down here, even after the feed store brought it to their attention. So the feed store quit carrying it.
Hmmm. Well I talked to the feed store today and they are putting in an order for me on monday, sure hope it's fresh! Looking forward to getting my boys started on it.
Check the dates on the bags before you buy. She was so disappointed. Her horses looked really good on it, and felt great, too. I hope it works out for you.
How old was the feed? That's terrible! I can't believe bluebonnet didn't make it right. |
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I just read the headlines
Posts: 4483
        
| want2chase3 - 2016-04-22 12:02 PM
GLP - 2016-04-22 11:54 AM
want2chase3 - 2016-04-22 11:48 AM
GLP - 2016-04-21 3:23 PM
want2chase3 - 2016-04-21 9:56 AM
Anyone ever feed blue bonnet natural blend performance?
A friend did. She had a 17 yr. old Reiner she fed it to. He looked and felt great on it. But the warehouse kept sending old feed down here, even after the feed store brought it to their attention. So the feed store quit carrying it.
Hmmm. Well I talked to the feed store today and they are putting in an order for me on monday, sure hope it's fresh! Looking forward to getting my boys started on it.
Check the dates on the bags before you buy. She was so disappointed. Her horses looked really good on it, and felt great, too. I hope it works out for you.
How old was the feed? That's terrible! I can't believe bluebonnet didn't make it right.
If I remember right, it was at least 6 months old. I know I was shocked at how old it was. It didn't smell right and her horses no longer wanted to eat it. She never called Bluebonnet, and the feed store told her they called the warehouse to complain, so I am not sure who that was. But no one else down here was selling Bluebonnet feeds. So she went to something else. |
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  Whack and Roll
Posts: 6342
      Location: NE Texas | Half scoop of whole oats once a day with a cup of BOSS and Cur-OST products. Healthy flake of alfalfa twice a day. Simple and easy. |
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 Expert
Posts: 5293
     
| I am major OCD when it comes to dates on bags. If its a pelleted feed I am slightly more lenient but anything textured and I won't buy it if its over 30-45 days old. I wont let my horses touch a feed thats over 60 days old. I personally think that 90 days is about the max so i try and stay at nothing in their bucket over 60 days. lol My local tractor supply probably gets mad every time I go into the store!! They are good about rotating so first few bags on top are usually 45-60-90 days old. Well good enough for them to sell, however, I move all those bags and dig to the bottom and get the ones that are most of the time a week or two old!!!! They think I'm crazy. lol I'm nice and put all the older stuff neatly back in the stack. lol |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| GLP - 2016-04-22 12:28 PM
want2chase3 - 2016-04-22 12:02 PM
GLP - 2016-04-22 11:54 AM
want2chase3 - 2016-04-22 11:48 AM
GLP - 2016-04-21 3:23 PM
want2chase3 - 2016-04-21 9:56 AM
Anyone ever feed blue bonnet natural blend performance?
A friend did. She had a 17 yr. old Reiner she fed it to. He looked and felt great on it. But the warehouse kept sending old feed down here, even after the feed store brought it to their attention. So the feed store quit carrying it.
Hmmm. Well I talked to the feed store today and they are putting in an order for me on monday, sure hope it's fresh! Looking forward to getting my boys started on it.
Check the dates on the bags before you buy. She was so disappointed. Her horses looked really good on it, and felt great, too. I hope it works out for you.
How old was the feed? That's terrible! I can't believe bluebonnet didn't make it right.
If I remember right, it was at least 6 months old. I know I was shocked at how old it was. It didn't smell right and her horses no longer wanted to eat it. She never called Bluebonnet, and the feed store told her they called the warehouse to complain, so I am not sure who that was. But no one else down here was selling Bluebonnet feeds. So she went to something else.
Nobody around me sells it either, I have to drive an hour. I'm definitely checking the dates on the bags before I leave. I worked with a rep from the company to try and get the 3 local feed stores to carry it , but we had no luck. I loved the omega force so much, but I just cant afford it right now, this nature's blend is a little less than what I'm feeding now. |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| FLITASTIC - 2016-04-22 12:37 PM
I am major OCD when it comes to dates on bags. If its a pelleted feed I am slightly more lenient but anything textured and I won't buy it if its over 30-45 days old. I wont let my horses touch a feed thats over 60 days old. I personally think that 90 days is about the max so i try and stay at nothing in their bucket over 60 days. lol My local tractor supply probably gets mad every time I go into the store!! They are good about rotating so first few bags on top are usually 45-60-90 days old. Well good enough for them to sell, however, I move all those bags and dig to the bottom and get the ones that are most of the time a week or two old!!!! They think I'm crazy. lol I'm nice and put all the older stuff neatly back in the stack. lol
I'm sure it varies for different manufacturers, and I hate to admit but I've never looked for dates, the feed store guys load my pickup for me. Whereabouts on the bag do you look? |
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Red Bull Agressive
Posts: 5981
         Location: North Dakota | Oats-2lbs Alfalfa pellets/cubes-4lbs Renew Gold-1/2lb daily Flaxseed-1 scoop flax supplement |
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