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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9992
           Location: Kansas | I have a friend who dropped 2 fillies off at my place for me to get ready for her to sell at an auction.....the 2 year is smaller than the yearling, and both look almost like weanlings. I've been feeding them both forco and ultium along with alfalfa....but I almost feel sorry for the girls! Would it have affected both of their growth? |
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 Pork Fat is my Favorite
Posts: 3791
        Location: The Oklahoma plains. | I have seen it go both ways. Some really grow and blossom at 5 and some never do. I wish that was helpful. I think proper nutrition of the mare and baby are imperitive for bloomy babies. |
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Veteran
Posts: 205
 
| They could both be stunted if both were on the same feeding program for all their lives. Perhaps after seeing how the 2 year old didn't grow, she fed the yearling more and that is why it is the bigger of the two. |
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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9992
           Location: Kansas | TurnLane - 2015-04-07 10:40 AM I have seen it go both ways. Some really grow and blossom at 5 and some never do. I wish that was helpful. I think proper nutrition of the mare and baby are imperitive for bloomy babies.
kind of what I was thinking....shame, they are both such beautiful colorful fillies! |
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 A Somebody to Everybody
Posts: 41354
              Location: Under The Big Sky Of Texas | Do you have any pictures? |
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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9992
           Location: Kansas | The bay roan is a yearling, the dun is a 2 year old.
(fillies2.JPG)
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fillies2.JPG (84KB - 144 downloads)
IMG_1097.JPG (92KB - 129 downloads)
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  Warmblood with Wings
Posts: 27846
           Location: Florida.. | wow! |
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 A Somebody to Everybody
Posts: 41354
              Location: Under The Big Sky Of Texas | hoofs_in_motion - 2015-04-07 1:37 PM The bay roan is a yearling, the dun is a 2 year old.
They both look pretty little, If the mother was not getting the right feed when they were carring the babys it could have affected their growth. They do look in pretty good flesh, maybe but them on a good feeding program and just go from there. What type of sale is the owner wanting to put them in? And type of breeding are they? |
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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9992
           Location: Kansas | Southtxponygirl - 2015-04-07 1:46 PM hoofs_in_motion - 2015-04-07 1:37 PM The bay roan is a yearling, the dun is a 2 year old. They both look pretty little, If the mother was not getting the right feed when they were carring the babys it could have affected their growth. They do look in pretty good flesh, maybe but them on a good feeding program and just go from there. What type of sale is the owner wanting to put them in? And type of breeding are they?
They are really little in person, but super sweet girls. They follow my daughter and I everywhere. They aren't skinny by any means, just a tad ribby, just small. The dun is registered, she is blue valentine/driftwood bred...the roan is by the same sire, out of a tee jay badger bred mare. She doesn't have papers back on her yet.
She is selling them at some dinky spring sale next weekend, which I told her she won't get what she wants out of them...but not my fillies. |
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  Warmblood with Wings
Posts: 27846
           Location: Florida.. | They dont appear skinny but they dont look healthy or like they were fed well nutritionally.. to me from the photos.. not neglected by any means but not how I like them to look |
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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9992
           Location: Kansas | No I don't believe they were neglected at all, nutritionally....they aren't where they should be at all for their ages. |
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  Warmblood with Wings
Posts: 27846
           Location: Florida.. | hoofs_in_motion - 2015-04-07 2:58 PM No I don't believe they were neglected at all, nutritionally....they aren't where they should be at all for their ages.
exactly what i mean to. |
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Expert
Posts: 3147
   
| I bought a yearling filly early in her yearling year whose dam and she had been starved from day one. Before the summer was over she was winning halter classes left and right. She matured at 15.3 and continued to win at halter and pleasure. |
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 Peat and Repeat
Posts: 2773
      Location: IN MY OWN LITTLE WORLD AT LEAST THEY KNOW ME HERE | They look wormy. I'D check when n possible worm again.
Jmo |
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 Can You Hear Me Now?
       Location: When you hit the middle of nowhere .. Keep driving | I don't know the care of the horses before but consider this...
The first colt I had and sold looked horrible his yearling year and start of his 2 year old year. People thought he wouldn't grow.... Fast forward that summer and he blossomed into something nice. Everyone was shocked, I have his older brother and he did the same thing (so I suspected it), and is 5 and just keeps growing (he's 15.3 and still going... both his parents were 15 hands). Now the 2 year old little brother is behind their other one they have (both by my stud) I keep telling the new owner not to worry because he looks like a yearling (literally my yearling is bigger). They always got everything they needed with each owner and they just matured late. It's a line in the dam side I figure... for mine. I know they look scraggly now but some are just late bloomers.
Edited by ndiehl 2015-04-07 6:15 PM
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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9992
           Location: Kansas | I wormed both when they got here with strongdid. I'm going to worm with Ivermectin here in a week. Both are getting 4lbs each of ultium a day, along with forco and a flake of alfalfa morning/evening.
Both have never had their feet done, and she isn't going to pay the farrier when he comes to trim them. I hate saying this, but I feel like I'm being taken advantage of, as she isn't putting forth any effort to pay for their feed, hay, wormer, or even a $30 trim. |
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  Playing the Waiting Game
Posts: 2304
   
| hoofs_in_motion - 2015-04-08 7:57 AM I wormed both when they got here with strongdid. I'm going to worm with Ivermectin here in a week. Both are getting 4lbs each of ultium a day, along with forco and a flake of alfalfa morning/evening.
Both have never had their feet done, and she isn't going to pay the farrier when he comes to trim them. I hate saying this, but I feel like I'm being taken advantage of, as she isn't putting forth any effort to pay for their feed, hay, wormer, or even a $30 trim.
Ya think??? Yeah I do!! Is she paying you or is it on commission... You are probably coming out on the short end of that stick... Good luck. |
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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9992
           Location: Kansas | I'm not getting any money out of this, I was just trying to be a nice friend and help out.....but not at the expense of myself. |
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 A Somebody to Everybody
Posts: 41354
              Location: Under The Big Sky Of Texas | hoofs_in_motion - 2015-04-08 8:38 AM I'm not getting any money out of this, I was just trying to be a nice friend and help out.....but not at the expense of myself.
Well heck if you are the one puting the money into these babys and the owner is not paying you to do all the work and expects you to do all the work and use your own money for HER horses I would be telling her to pick them back up. There is no way that these horses will bring any kind of money as small as they are for their age. And you will be out what you put in to them. |
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 Undercover Amish Mafia Member
Posts: 9992
           Location: Kansas | well i texted her asking her to pick the fillies up, no response.....went to facebook, she blocked me. I'm going by her house this evening. |
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