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 Blackbelt Babe
Posts: 9405
       Location: South Georgia Good o'l USA | Can you share your experience and knowledge. Feed/diet not trauma induced.
There are probably other post on this subject and Iβd like to go through them but havenβt found a way to search them yet.
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  Neat Freak
Posts: 11216
     Location: Wonderful Wyoming | how old is the horse? I always thought the best thing was to change whatever in the diet was causing the imbalance? I struggled with this with a sick colt last year that when weaned, and when healthy, grew too fast. We pulled him off grain, gave him only grass hay and he was on a ration balancer. He also was given loose mineral. He is the only baby I have had in 20 yrs that had an issue when in the corral. Vet thinks being sick for so long is the cause, as he grew so fast when he started to feel good and eat well. Mine had issues in hind pasturns but I would think it would be the same as in knees. |
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 Blackbelt Babe
Posts: 9405
       Location: South Georgia Good o'l USA | Interested in hearing about experience in yearlings up to coming 3 YOβs. Horses fed out too quickly.
What was done and did it work type experiences
Edited by blackhorse 2018-05-17 9:53 AM
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Expert
Posts: 1694
      Location: Willows, CA | I have done diets for a lot of these horses over the years. The challenge is that what you see today, you caused 40 days ago. You can fix the diet, and the horse may still get worse for a few weeks. Fix the diet and accept that things may look bad for a while. Lower calcium and lower protein is the short term answer. |
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 Blackbelt Babe
Posts: 9405
       Location: South Georgia Good o'l USA | winwillows - 2018-05-17 12:12 PM
I have done diets for a lot of these horses over the years. The challenge is that what you see today, you caused 40 days ago. You can fix the diet, and the horse may still get worse for a few weeks. Fix the diet and accept that things may look bad for a while. Lower calcium and lower protein is the short term answer.
Can you share with me a diet I can use? Thanks |
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 You get what you give
Posts: 13030
     Location: Texas | cut back the calories and keep confined in a stall. What feed are you feeding now? I would likely just feed hay for a while. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 600
  Location: Oklahoma & Texas | What winwillows said plus add msm to diet...old racehorse trainer/breeder told me this years ago and has always worked now i feed it to any fast growing yearling-3 yr olds |
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Expert
Posts: 2685
     
| I have some experience with it in fetlocks/ pasturns. I put them on a colt feed and grass hay. I didn't want to take a bunch of nutrition from them, which is why i kept them on the colt feed, but I did take the alfalfa away and put them on just a prairie grass hay. I also put them on rejuvaniade by progressive. It's a God sent. Its $ but soooo worth it. It's specifically made for physitis.
ETA:
MSM is not a bad idea for sure. It's been proven to reduce inflammation in connective tissues, joints & tendons.
Edited by RoaniePonie11 2018-05-18 6:00 AM
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  That's White "Man" to You
Posts: 5515
 
| I would address the inflamation as well. |
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