Log in to my account Barrel Horse World
Come on in Folks on-line

Today is

You are logged in as a guest. Logon or register an account to access more features.


Grains vs Hay

Jump to page :
Last activity 2015-08-11 3:57 PM
39 replies, 5522 views

View previous thread :: View next thread
   General Discussion -> Barrel Talk
Refresh
 
streakysox
Reg. Jul 2008
Posted 2015-08-06 12:54 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



Take a Picture


Posts: 12842
50005000200050010010010025
Everyone who feeds horses needs to get the book THE HORSE NUTRITION HANDBOOK. I took a horse nutrition course in college years ago. This book really was a short refresher course. I suggest that you get a highlighter and highlight important info as you read so you can go back and quickly browse through important things. It has a chart of the requirements for horses and other charts. I keep mine by the bed and go back and read through it at night on a regular basis.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Nevertooold
Reg. Oct 2003
Posted 2015-08-06 12:57 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



I Prefer to Live in Fantasy Land


Posts: 64864
500050005000500050005000500050005000500050005000200020005001001001002525
Location: In the Hills of Texas
Our neighbor use to feed more grain then hay and he lost about one horse a year to colic... 
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
cavyrunsbarrels
Reg. Dec 2010
Posted 2015-08-06 12:57 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Red Bull Agressive


Posts: 5981
5000500100100100100252525
Location: North Dakota
Turnburnsis - 2015-08-06 10:01 AM

What is better whole oats or crimped oats?

Whole. Horses digest them just fine and because the hull is not damaged, they retain more nutrients and fat.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
iloveequine40
Reg. Oct 2013
Posted 2015-08-06 1:27 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Elite Veteran


Posts: 618
500100
I completely took my horses off grain in January. I feed alfalfa only and a ration balancer between 1-2 lbs a day depending on horse. I do feed soaked alfalfa cubes with loose salt sprinkled on top under the balancer to help encourage more drinking and they get flakes of alfalfa as well. They are turned out 24/7 except for my 2 young horses who I put in a stall w/run at night. They all look fabulous. My open horse is more focused and clocking faster than last year in same pens and patterns. When he sweats it's not that foamy white it's clear. As a human nutritionist I apply the "clean" eating philosophy to my horses.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
FLITASTIC
Reg. Jun 2012
Posted 2015-08-06 2:03 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



Expert


Posts: 5293
5000100100252525
iloveequine40 - 2015-08-06 11:27 AM

I completely took my horses off grain in January. I feed alfalfa only and a ration balancer between 1-2 lbs a day depending on horse. I do feed soaked alfalfa cubes with loose salt sprinkled on top under the balancer to help encourage more drinking and they get flakes of alfalfa as well. They are turned out 24/7 except for my 2 young horses who I put in a stall w/run at night. They all look fabulous. My open horse is more focused and clocking faster than last year in same pens and patterns. When he sweats it's not that foamy white it's clear. As a human nutritionist I apply the "clean" eating philosophy to my horses.

The only problem I could see with this hay only diet is some horses that are used very hard would not be able to hold up energy wise. For example if your trying to make the NFR and traveling lots of miles and hours and making 80-100 rodeos a year, hay is not going to cut it. Horses are evolved to be grazing animals etc but horses were never meant to go thousands of miles a year in a trailer and compete in 100 rodeos either. Soooooo something has to be added to the diet to fulfill those energy requirements. Having said that I have switched to whole grains and natural fat courses from processed feeds and molasses.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Tdove
Reg. Apr 2015
Posted 2015-08-06 2:16 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



Elite Veteran


Posts: 851
5001001001002525
Location: West Texas
It is not the grass hay that would be the issue, as yes most all grass hays have more calcium than phosphorous. It is feed only oats or any grain along with it that can put your ratio dangerously low or inverted. With calcium, I personally prefer to have more than too little.

If you fed 15lbs of grass hay with a 1.5:1 Ca:Ph and added only 6lbs of oats daily, that would put your total ration at 1:1 approximately. If you hay didn't quite have 1.5:1 or you fed more oats, then you would be inverse with Ca;Ph and that in the long run would cause you problems. Therefore, in that situation you would need to supplement protein in some form, either with a protein/mineral supplement or a high calcium feed source.

How many people have their hay tested and know if it has enough calcium?
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
BS Hauler
Reg. Jan 2012
Posted 2015-08-06 2:42 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Expert


Posts: 1314
1000100100100
Location: North Central Iowa Land of white frozen grass
My horses are on a pasture that we seeded down to a pasture mix and also added alfalfa to it. They are on it 24/7 about seven months of the year. The rest of the year they are on a round bale the same way. I also have our feed mill make me up my own mixture of feed that they get once a day at 2.5 # per head. I do this so they come to me and they are also getting all their minerals, vitamins, salt and daily nutrient needs.
Whole  Oats                                1,200 #
Cracked Corn                                300 #
Hy Pro Soybean Meal                   200 #
Kandy Treat Molassis                    100 #
Alfalfa Pellets                                 100 #
Bran                                                 50 #
Monocal 2 to 1 Mineral                    20 #
ADE vitamins                                   15 #
Soybean Oil                                     32 #
Beet Shreds                                   100 #
Trace Mineral Salt                            20 #
Limestone                                           6 #
 Total of ration                                2,143 #
Total cost of ration                          $ 411.13
Cost per #                                           $.192
Cost per hd per day @ 2.5#                $.49 

 
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
iloveequine40
Reg. Oct 2013
Posted 2015-08-06 3:21 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Elite Veteran


Posts: 618
500100
Most people do not work their horses that hard though or travel like that. Adding fat and energy is the cheapest/easiest form of supplementation ie with oils or stabilized rice bran. If when I decide to haul heavily I may need to reevaluate my feeding program but after dealing with an ulcery horse I will not feed processed grains as it is a leading cause of them along with hauling and stalling.
To the original poster, my ulcer horse was a very picky eater before we treated him and would nibble at it and walk away. He never finished his grain or hay. Now on an almost all forage diet he eats it all.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
FlyingHigh1454
Reg. Oct 2013
Posted 2015-08-06 4:26 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Elite Veteran


Posts: 1131
100010025
All any horse needs as a base feed is oats and a good multi-vitamin. No special grains or anything, it's shown that oats are the best fillers.


We feed whole oats, essential K/alfalfa pellets mix (50/50 mix), and farrier formula as needed with free range alfalfa hay. Our horses look great. The 3 year old eats a bale and half of alfalfa, 3 quarts of oats, and 1 quart of essential k/alfalfa pellet mix a day, plus free pasture. He looks fantastic.

Edited by FlyingHigh1454 2015-08-06 4:28 PM
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
streakysox
Reg. Jul 2008
Posted 2015-08-06 5:33 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



Take a Picture


Posts: 12842
50005000200050010010010025
BS Hauler - 2015-08-06 2:42 PM

My horses are on a pasture that we seeded down to a pasture mix and also added alfalfa to it. They are on it 24/7 about seven months of the year. The rest of the year they are on a round bale the same way. I also have our feed mill make me up my own mixture of feed that they get once a day at 2.5 # per head. I do this so they come to me and they are also getting all their minerals, vitamins, salt and daily nutrient needs.
Whole  Oats                                1,200 #
Cracked Corn                                300 #
Hy Pro Soybean Meal                   200 #
Kandy Treat Molassis                    100 #
Alfalfa Pellets                                 100 #
Bran                                                 50 #
Monocal 2 to 1 Mineral                    20 #
ADE vitamins                                   15 #
Soybean Oil                                     32 #
Beet Shreds                                   100 #
Trace Mineral Salt                            20 #
Limestone                                           6 #
 Total of ration                                2,143 #
Total cost of ration                          $ 411.13
Cost per #                                           $.192
Cost per hd per day @ 2.5#                $.49 

 

Would are the nutritional values of this mix?
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Bibliafarm
Reg. Jul 2008
Posted 2015-08-06 10:49 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Military family

Warmblood with Wings


Posts: 27846
50005000500050005000200050010010010025
Location: Florida..
ampratt - 2015-08-06 12:41 PM Depends on who you ask. I feed whole oats (on the advise of a vet who is also knowledgeable in equine nutrition) and was advised whole oats are not that much lower in nutritional value as the crimped. Whole oats store longer. As stated earlier, unless your horse is out on nice pasture it's best to include a COMPLETE vitamin/mineral supplement when feeding oats and high quality hay or alfalfa hay.

 whole is more nutritional.. the more processed the more nutrients it loses..
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
hammer_time
Reg. Jul 2007
Posted 2015-08-06 11:37 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



Money Eating Baggage Owner


Posts: 9586
500020002000500252525
Location: Phoenix
FlyingHigh1454 - 2015-08-06 2:26 PM All any horse needs as a base feed is oats and a good multi-vitamin. No special grains or anything, it's shown that oats are the best fillers. We feed whole oats, essential K/alfalfa pellets mix (50/50 mix), and farrier formula as needed with free range alfalfa hay. Our horses look great. The 3 year old eats a bale and half of alfalfa, 3 quarts of oats, and 1 quart of essential k/alfalfa pellet mix a day, plus free pasture. He looks fantastic.

 Bale and a half of hay a day?  
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
ampratt
Reg. Dec 2012
Posted 2015-08-07 7:43 AM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Military family
Elite Veteran


Posts: 669
5001002525
Location: Central Texas
Bibliafarm - 2015-08-06 10:49 PM

ampratt - 2015-08-06 12:41 PM Depends on who you ask. I feed whole oats (on the advise of a vet who is also knowledgeable in equine nutrition) and was advised whole oats are not that much lower in nutritional value as the crimped. Whole oats store longer. As stated earlier, unless your horse is out on nice pasture it's best to include a COMPLETE vitamin/mineral supplement when feeding oats and high quality hay or alfalfa hay.

 whole is more nutritional.. the more processed the more nutrients it loses..

Thanks! I knew I would get that wrong.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Tdove
Reg. Apr 2015
Posted 2015-08-07 8:33 AM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



Elite Veteran


Posts: 851
5001001001002525
Location: West Texas
Crimped oats are slightly more digestible. However, their cost of processing is more than the increased digestibility. They also have lower fat, less nutrients, and do not keep as long.

Whole oats have more fiber and are a very good concentrate. My experience is if you can slow the consumption of them down or feed small feedings, you will get their benefit and minimize their potential problems.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
rachellyn80
Reg. Jan 2004
Posted 2015-08-07 9:33 AM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



Jr. Detective


5000200010001002525
Location: Beggs, OK
hammer_time - 2015-08-06 11:37 PM
FlyingHigh1454 - 2015-08-06 2:26 PM All any horse needs as a base feed is oats and a good multi-vitamin. No special grains or anything, it's shown that oats are the best fillers. We feed whole oats, essential K/alfalfa pellets mix (50/50 mix), and farrier formula as needed with free range alfalfa hay. Our horses look great. The 3 year old eats a bale and half of alfalfa, 3 quarts of oats, and 1 quart of essential k/alfalfa pellet mix a day, plus free pasture. He looks fantastic.
 Bale and a half of hay a day?  


I saw that too....and if you're feeding free choice alfalfa, why would you need alfalfa pellets?
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
TurnLane
Reg. May 2007
Posted 2015-08-07 9:33 AM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



Pork Fat is my Favorite


Posts: 3791
20001000500100100252525
Location: The Oklahoma plains.
We would love to feed great alfalfa hay only if it was native to our area- or we could count on a consistant safe supply.

May I ask what is everyones thoughts on where the line is drawn on the best states to buy alfalfa?

Are blister beetles a concern way north? Or is that just certain states?


We have always been a hay primary barn with feed added for working horses horses or growing horses. We have been fortunate to have two hay contracts a year. Obviously a few years we have used more and needed to find hay, especially the drought or when we were hoarding project horses. We have only used 4 feeds in 20 years so we dont make changes quickly, often or without reason.  I think our horses have always looked well.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
classicpotatochip
Reg. Mar 2011
Posted 2015-08-07 9:45 AM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay



Owner of a ratting catting machine


Posts: 2258
20001001002525
I really, really, really, really suggest a 10 day course of ProBios Equine Paste or Gel, 1/2 tube, 2X a day.
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
ampratt
Reg. Dec 2012
Posted 2015-08-07 10:06 AM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Military family
Elite Veteran


Posts: 669
5001002525
Location: Central Texas
keep'nup - 2015-08-06 8:24 AM

Who all feeds more grains then hay? I veed beet pulp, 12% horse feed and mbc....thinking about adding Timothy pellets. I have one horse who is not liking hay! My to colts look great.. .just trying to change things up for the other! Want y'alls opinions on upping grains and lowering hay....he is turned out for a couple hours a day.

Sorry your thread kind of got hijacked (although all the information provided is great). I think I may have started it's de-railment. I sincerely hope you find a way to get the fiber and roughage in your horse (which is what I think you were asking about) and get him on the road to being a healthy happy horse!
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Bibliafarm
Reg. Jul 2008
Posted 2015-08-07 10:34 AM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Military family

Warmblood with Wings


Posts: 27846
50005000500050005000200050010010010025
Location: Florida..
 Beet Pulp -Fiber

but horse needs hay more then grain.. roughage .. or Good pasture...winter you will need to feed HAY no matter what..
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
SG.
Reg. Sep 2003
Posted 2015-08-11 3:57 PM
Subject: RE: Grains vs Hay


Blessed
BHW Advertiser


50005000500050005000500050005000500050005000500050005000500100100100100252525
Location: Here
Bibliafarm - 2015-08-07 10:34 AM  Beet Pulp -Fiber



but horse needs hay more then grain.. roughage .. or Good pasture...winter you will need to feed HAY no matter what..

 
↑ Top ↓ Bottom
Jump to page :
Jump to forum :
Search this forum
Printer friendly version
E-mail a link to this thread
 

© Copyright 2002- BarrelHorseWorld.com All rights reserved including digital rights

Support - Contact / Log in to my account


Working Truck World Working Horse World Cargo Trailer World Horse Trailer World Roping Horse World
'
Registered to: Barrel Horse World
(Delete all cookies set by this site)
Running MegaBBS ASP Forum Software
© 2002-2026 PD9 Software