nutrition

Recommend an equine nutrition source to me

I have to finally face facts and realize that in 2014, Tristan turns 19. He’s no longer a young horse. He’s not quite a senior (in my eyes, anyway), and he’s always been a healthy easy keeper. But that bit of scare with weight gain in late fall/early winter has made me think harder about his nutritional needs.

I’d like to learn more. I’m scouring the internet, but I think it’s time for a purposeful study.

What resources do you use to learn about nutrition? Do you have a book, a website, an online class that you’ve found especially useful?

I’m most interested in balancing nutritional needs for the working sporthorse, but I’d like to learn a bit of everything.

Any suggestions appreciated!

colic · nutrition

The Equine Digestive System

Last winter, the barn lost a horse to a long slow colic, and during the two awful days where we walked him and groomed him and changed IV bags and sent him off to the vet hospital, and then got the news and mourned, I remarked to the barn manager my long-held theory that the equine digestive system is proof against intelligent design.

The more I learn about horse digestion and anatomy, the more I hold fast to that theory. The Vermont Large Animal Clinic, the lovely people who did Tristan’s surgery, posted this really fascinating article in which the author sources various items from Home Depot to explain the makeup and progression of the equine digestive system. It’s fascinating and horrifying in its complexity.

The blog that posted the article, Equine Nutrition Nerd, is on my must-read list now. I’ve been meaning to learn more about equine nutrition for some time now to really carefully assess what Tristan is eating and how it can help him.

What resources do you use to understand nutrition? How involved are you in planning and tweaking your horse’s diet?

nutrition · supplements

Tweaking

Okay: a few good rides in a row again, though I’m off for a work trip for the next few days out of state, alas.

Thought I’d record for posterity a few small changes to Tristan’s routine.

The first is that I’m feeding him 8 Tums (the generic Walmart version) about 15-20 minutes before every ride. I’m only three rides into this. It’s an experiment. He’s never struck me as an ulcery horse, really – he’s pretty chill – but he does get very head-flippy and resistant during warmup. Now, part of this is definitely my lack of riding ability – but part of it is unwillingness. I’m not ready to report back yet, but early indications are a slight positive. (If nothing else, he eats them like candy and that puts him in a good mood…)

I consulted with my vet and took him off Previcoxx. He’d been on it since shortly after his surgery (basically week 2 of rehab, when he stepped down off bute), more as a general anti-inflammatory than in response to anything specific. I was being extra-cautious in keeping him on it daily, and it was inexpensive and provided by the barn (~$20 a month). When I weighed the longterm liver problems of a daily NSAID (eek) with his age (not quite old enough to prioritize comfort over longevity) and the probable benefit he was getting (possibly nil), vet agreed that we should pull it.

He still gets a daily joint supplement – HorseTech’s ReitSport Senior – and the vet and I are going to revisit the general support question as he progresses in work off the Previcoxx. I may do a round or two of Adequan/Pentosan with him when they come back on the market. It’s not pressing right now, but it’s something I’d like to try. If it does make a big difference I’d ratchet back his oral supplement to just a mutlivitamin/probiotic and keep up the injectables regularly.

Finally, a few days ago I caught him eating his manure. Corprophagy, for him, is a very reliable indicator that he needs a salt block. Several months ago he had a biiiiig red one in his stall on the ground and he’d been using that, but it vanished when he shifted stalls and I have been too darn lazy to seek it out again. So I picked a little one up at Tractor Supply, dropped it in his feed bucket, and he has been licking away since, happy as a clam. (Alas, he destroys the wall-mounted holders with distressing regularity, leaving me to panic about screws falling into his bedding and/or projecting metal pieces jabbing his eye.)

So there’s that. His weight is inching up again as his grain has been upped – he’s getting a whole half quart in his AM and PM feed, the glutton. I toyed with the idea of switching him to a senior feed recently but after reading and comparing labels they didn’t address anything he particularly needed – he’s not a hard keeper and he’s in very good overall health and doesn’t need the kind of support they tend to provide. Someday, but not today.