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 Expert
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| draftmare - 2018-05-07 11:17 AM
Southtxponygirl - 2018-05-07 11:17 AM
winwillows - 2018-05-07 11:03 AM Original Renew Gold is 17% NSC. Renew Gold Senior is 19.5% NSC.
So this is more of a supplement that you can add to your feeding program, is that what I am reading? I can get really confused easy so be kind to me, lol..Β
I feed it as a supplement instead of having to feed a liquid fat. Most oils are super unbalanced in Omega-6s which can lead to inflammation. With my mare being recently diagnosed with arthritis I wanted to get her off of the oil ASAP. I have read of people feeding just RG and then their supplements, but I would think you would need to add some kind of vitamin or mineral supplement to that.
Correct. Mine Get ONE SCOOP Platinum GI with their Renew GOld. I have also used Formula 707 Daily essentials with a lot of success. I may go back to the Daily essentials after this bucket of platinum is used up. The Senior formula covers a lot of those bases the regular RG didn't
Edited by FLITASTIC 2018-05-07 1:27 PM
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Expert
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      Location: Willows, CA | Southtxponygirl - 2018-05-07 11:17 AM
winwillows - 2018-05-07 11:03 AM Original Renew Gold is 17% NSC. Renew Gold Senior is 19.5% NSC.
So this is more of a supplement that you can add to your feeding program, is that what I am reading? I can get really confused easy so be kind to me, lol..Β
Most of our customers will not feed additional grain based feed. All horses are different. But, with quality roughage, additional concentrate feeds are usually not necessary. | |
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              Location: Under The Big Sky Of Texas | winwillows - 2018-05-07 2:36 PM Southtxponygirl - 2018-05-07 11:17 AM winwillows - 2018-05-07 11:03 AM Original Renew Gold is 17% NSC. Renew Gold Senior is 19.5% NSC. So this is more of a supplement that you can add to your feeding program, is that what I am reading? I can get really confused easy so be kind to me, lol.. Most of our customers will not feed additional grain based feed. All horses are different. But, with quality roughage, additional concentrate feeds are usually not necessary. I feed Triple Crown Lite to one gelding he gets maybe 2 lbs because hes IR and maybe gets to go out in the pasture once a week for a few hours and my other two that I feed get Bluebonnet Eguilene pellets maybe close to 1 and a half lbs if even that much cause they have good pasture but go in their pens/stalls at night with hay, so could the renew gold be fed as a supplement and as a top dressing on their feed? Just wondering since I have a friend asking me about the Renew Gold as a top dressing. And I feed twice a day, befor they go out and when they come in. And everybody looks super but just wondering if it would hurt if to add the Renew Gold My IR gelding gets a supplement for his IR now and the other two dont get anything but biomane. Its easyer to ask these question instead of calling you because I will forget half of what I would ask you over the phone and this way I can see if I missed anything. 
Edited by Southtxponygirl 2018-05-07 4:18 PM
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Expert
Posts: 1694
      Location: Willows, CA | First off, Bluebonnet is a good company that makes safe products. It seems like today is my day for IR horses. I might go a week without a question about one, then have a day like today where I get questions from three owners about their IR horses. In general, keeping the sugar load low per feeding is important. Renew Gold is proving safe for these horses because you get hind gut efficiency for better digestion of the roughage, without a big slug of sugar all at one time because of the low feeding rates. If you feel that your hay quality requires additional calories for condition and you don't have access to better hay to solve that issue that way, a combination of Renew Gold and additional concentrates can be used. I greatly prefer just Renew Gold and perhaps a little more alfalfa along with soaked grass hay when feeding IR horses to keep the total concentrate inclusion small. This generates energy without the blood sugar spike associated with larger inclusions of concentrate, even low NSC concentrate. In any case, I would limit the total combination of concentrate, if you choose to go that route, to less than 1.5 pounds per feeding in a IR horse. You can stretch this a little on horses that are not IR. Even then, I like to keep concentrate to no more than 2 pounds per feeding. | |
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 A Somebody to Everybody
Posts: 41354
              Location: Under The Big Sky Of Texas | winwillows - 2018-05-07 5:02 PM First off, Bluebonnet is a good company that makes safe products. It seems like today is my day for IR horses. I might go a week without a question about one, then have a day like today where I get questions from three owners about their IR horses. In general, keeping the sugar load low per feeding is important. Renew Gold is proving safe for these horses because you get hind gut efficiency for better digestion of the roughage, without a big slug of sugar all at one time because of the low feeding rates. If you feel that your hay quality requires additional calories for condition and you don't have access to better hay to solve that issue that way, a combination of Renew Gold and additional concentrates can be used. I greatly prefer just Renew Gold and perhaps a little more alfalfa along with soaked grass hay when feeding IR horses to keep the total concentrate inclusion small. This generates energy without the blood sugar spike associated with larger inclusions of concentrate, even low NSC concentrate. In any case, I would limit the total combination of concentrate, if you choose to go that route, to less than 1.5 pounds per feeding in a IR horse. You can stretch this a little on horses that are not IR. Even then, I like to keep concentrate to no more than 2 pounds per feeding.
Thank you Win I will past this along to my friend and I will just keep everything simple for my guys, they are beefy and look great with a shine that looks like glass so I guess they really dont need much of anything now, but I sure will pass this along to my friend that has trouble keeping weight on one horse. Thanks again | |
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      Location: Willows, CA | Southtxponygirl - 2018-05-07 5:14 PM
winwillows - 2018-05-07 5:02 PM First off, Bluebonnet is a good company that makes safe products. It seems like today is my day for IR horses. I might go a week without a question about one, then have a day like today where I get questions from three owners about their IR horses. In general, keeping the sugar load low per feeding is important. Renew Gold is proving safe for these horses because you get hind gut efficiency for better digestion of the roughage, without a big slug of sugar all at one time because of the low feeding rates. If you feel that your hay quality requires additional calories for condition and you don't have access to better hay to solve that issue that way, a combination of Renew Gold and additional concentrates can be used. I greatly prefer just Renew Gold and perhaps a little more alfalfa along with soaked grass hay when feeding IR horses to keep the total concentrate inclusion small. This generates energy without the blood sugar spike associated with larger inclusions of concentrate, even low NSC concentrate. In any case, I would limit the total combination of concentrate, if you choose to go that route, to less than 1.5 pounds per feeding in a IR horse. You can stretch this a little on horses that are not IR. Even then, I like to keep concentrate to no more than 2 pounds per feeding.
Thank you Win I will past this along to my friend and I will just keep everything simple for my guys, they are beefy and look great with a shine that looks like glass so I guess they really dont need much of anything now, but I sure will pass this along to my friend that has trouble keeping weight on one horse. Thanks againΒ Β
Have your friend give me a call at 530-934-9300 and I will help her see her options. I am very easy to talk to, and I am happy to help. | |
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Posts: 138
 
| winwillows - 2018-05-07 5:02 PM
First off, Bluebonnet is a good company that makes safe products. It seems like today is my day for IR horses. I might go a week without a question about one, then have a day like today where I get questions from three owners about their IR horses. In general, keeping the sugar load low per feeding is important. Renew Gold is proving safe for these horses because you get hind gut efficiency for better digestion of the roughage, without a big slug of sugar all at one time because of the low feeding rates. If you feel that your hay quality requires additional calories for condition and you don't have access to better hay to solve that issue that way, a combination of Renew Gold and additional concentrates can be used. I greatly prefer just Renew Gold and perhaps a little more alfalfa along with soaked grass hay when feeding IR horses to keep the total concentrate inclusion small. This generates energy without the blood sugar spike associated with larger inclusions of concentrate, even low NSC concentrate. In any case, I would limit the total combination of concentrate, if you choose to go that route, to less than 1.5 pounds per feeding in a IR horse. You can stretch this a little on horses that are not IR. Even then, I like to keep concentrate to no more than 2 pounds per feeding.
Hmm, this has me wondering about giving my mare just RG now. She is PSSM Type 1, so want to keep the fat high and the sugar and starch low. I have been feeding her alfalfa pellets, but just recently switched over to Buckeye Safe N Easy for a bit more fat instead of using oil. My goal has been to get her off the oil completely. | |
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