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  Whack and Roll
Posts: 6342
      Location: NE Texas | horsegirl - 2018-01-10 2:46 PM Well darn. The closest dealer is Arkansas, and I am in South Georgia.
Omnis dealer? You might contact them. There is a need for dealers in the southeast. |
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 The One
Posts: 7998
          Location: South Georgia | There is a need, based on that map, but I am a school teacher who boards her horse. No setup for something like that. |
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 Expert
Posts: 2335
     Location: IL | horsegirl - 2018-01-10 2:46 PM Well darn. The closest dealer is Arkansas, and I am in South Georgia.
I feed Equishine per my vet. My horses have never looked better. I give alfalfa pellets, whole flax seed, equishine, and Excel ( which is stomach and hindgut supplement, love it) |
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  Whack and Roll
Posts: 6342
      Location: NE Texas | horsegirl - 2018-01-10 2:50 PM There is a need, based on that map, but I am a school teacher who boards her horse. No setup for something like that.
Understand. I just fed baled alfalfa and a small amount of whole oats with either a cup of flax seed or BOSS before that. I fed about a pound of whole oats once a day. The Omnis were an easy transition for me because they are exactly what I was already feeding, just cubed. Do you have access to a different kind of cube or baled alfalfa? If I had to narrow my horse's diet down to one thing they wouldn't go without, it would undoubtedly be quality alfalfa. |
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 The One
Posts: 7998
          Location: South Georgia | Herbie - 2018-01-10 3:53 PM horsegirl - 2018-01-10 2:50 PM There is a need, based on that map, but I am a school teacher who boards her horse. No setup for something like that. Understand. I just fed baled alfalfa and a small amount of whole oats with either a cup of flax seed or BOSS before that. I fed about a pound of whole oats once a day. The Omnis were an easy transition for me because they are exactly what I was already feeding, just cubed. Do you have access to a different kind of cube or baled alfalfa? If I had to narrow my horse's diet down to one thing they wouldn't go without, it would undoubtedly be quality alfalfa.
I pasture board normally, and there is always a roundbale of coastal hay in the pasture. She gets a 12/10 pelleted feed 2x daily also. However, she came down with ulcers, so I switched her to stall board (turnout during the day, stall at night), so I could monitor her eating better and give her time to eat 2 flakes of alfalfa each night, along with more coastal hay. She's looking better already, but we are only on day 15 of Abgard (omeprazole) treatment. I can't really change things TOO much being in a boarding situation. I could switch her to just alfalfa but she could only have access to it at night while stalled. I couldn't throw it out into the pasture because the others would eat it. |
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  Whack and Roll
Posts: 6342
      Location: NE Texas | I understand. Very challenging for sure. |
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