Every time I
feed Grace I am reminded of why I own only one horse. She most defiantly eats
better than I do! At this time her daily diet consists of 2 feedings of the
best Eastern Washington orchard grass hay I can find, which is now mixed with
the same quality alfalfa/orchard grass mix. 3 pounds of rolled ration twice a
day, Miracle Clay, Dynamite vitamins, Dynamite Free and Easy, Chia Seed and Organic
Black Strap Molasses to mix it all together. I will soon be adding papaya
powder to this mixture for digestive health. This diet keeps Grace fat, slick
and shiny while being ridden 6 days a week and showing at least once a month.
There is one big issue I've been facing for at least the last 6 months;
Princess Grace won't clean up her hay.
At one point
I was feeding Grace 6 flakes of hay a day. She has experienced ulcer flare ups
in the past and my idea was to keep hay in front of her all the time.
Again - I feed the best hay I can find, I don't mind feeding extra as long as
it doesn't go to waste, but I found I was adding more and more of it to the
manure pile before it went through the horse. I had a ton of 1st cutting that
has some stem to it so I thought that was the issue, but then the 2nd cutting
with the soft beautiful grass arrived and she was leaving even more of that
behind. I cut her back to 4 flakes a day (2 flakes twice a day) and she was
still leaving perfectly good clean hay behind. I found that if I took away all
of the left over hay Grace was better about cleaning up the new meal I put in
front of her. This works for a feeding and then she starts leaving hay behind
again. It was killing me to fill a wheelbarrow with perfectly good hay that any
other horse would eat and dump it into the manure pile. Sarah suggested that I
start feeding Grace out of one of those slow feed hay bags. I filled one and
hung it on the trailer at a day long horse show; Grace wouldn’t touch it so I
shelved that idea. This weekend the ½ ton of orchard/alfalfa arrived. Grace is
currently inhaling the one flax of alfalfa mix but she then leaves most of the flake
of orchard grass behind. Again – BEAUTIFUL hay – I would eat it! I have to
believe that if there was another horse to compete with for food; this would
not be an issue. Grace is still fat, shiny and happy but I only see dollar
signs in the manure pile. I also want to get this under control before the rain
returns and makes a mess of things.
Last night I
pulled the slow feed hay net back out and filled it with 3 flakes of the
orchard grass hay. Before hanging it up I pulled hay through the small openings
so Grace would get the idea. I fed her flake of alfalfa mix on the floor of the
shelter and then hung the hay net in the corner. I prefer to have my horse eat
with her head down, but I am at the end of my rope with the hay waste. I left
her for the night convinced that she would be starving in the morning with a
full hay bag hanging in front of her. I also had the creeping thought in the
back of my mind that she would somehow hang herself up in the hay net event
though I knew I hung it safely.
When I went
up to the pasture to feed this morning I caught sight of the hay net in the
glow of my head lamp, it was still hanging. From a distance I could tell the
shape of it had change, it was longer and narrower! On closer inspection Grace
had not only eaten from the hay net, she had eaten about 2/3rds of the hay in
it! I searched the ground under the hay net – no hay on the ground; she had
also eaten all of the alfalfa mix from the night before. I have no idea why
Grace prefers to eat her hay in the bag, but I was really surprised by how much more
she consumed in one feeding. I plan to get a second slow feed bag so I can have
her morning hay ready to go the night before. I don't even want to think about how much hay I could have saved if I had just listened to Sarah the first time. Sigh...