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Pans'Mom asked in PetsHorses · 1 decade ago

Founder & putting fat horse on a diet?

My 7 year old Perch x QH mare has grass foundered badly. Dead lame on one foreleg , the vet is coming out to xray for rotation...

Question - ANY advice on her care and how to get the extra weight off her without excersise??

She is only out in a dirt paddock now - never got grain - but is a piggy regarding hay or grass...

All help appreciated!

Update:

She is 15hh and weighs 1450 pounds -she needs LESS hay and NEEDS to LOSE weight - I've never needed to put a horse on a diet and wonder how?

Thanks all!

7 Answers

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  • 1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    thats a tough one seeing as how she already isnt on grain at all. if she were mine i'd monitor her grass intake. maybe keep her in the dirt paddock and move her to a grass one for an hour or two... maybe more depending on how much grass there is. i'd feed her just grass hay no alfalfa... and if she loses some weight maybe beet pulp her? theres a beet pulp made in the UK that i have shipped over to the US called "Speedy Beet" and is recommended by the laminitis foundation.

    just remember to take advice on this site with a grain of salt... your vet always knows best... and good luck i hope she didnt rotate too badly =(

  • Anonymous
    5 years ago

    If he keeps breaking your fence every night then you clearly don't have very sturdy fencing. I'd suggest building him a small paddock with sturdy 5 board fencing at least 6 feet high so he can't jump out. A round pen works great. We use our round pen for turnout all the time, especially for a new horse to the farm because the fencing is so high no horse could jump out and it's built of sturdy solid wooden planks. No horse is getting out of there! Don't put your horse on a starvation diet. Horses need to be continuously filling their stomach in order to keep their digestive tract working normally. Find him some hay that is low in calories. Nothing moldy or gross, just something overly mature and kind of stemmy will work well. That way he can satisfy his craving and have something to chew on all the time, but won't gain a lot of nutrition from it. Just make sure you give him a vitamin/mineral supplement because this type of hay will not supply much in the way of vitamins and minerals.

  • gallop
    Lv 7
    1 decade ago

    She may have insulin resistance, which should be checked (blood test) since medication could help. I would feed only grass hay (no alphalfa or clover) and limit the amount fed. If she could get small amounts 3 or 4 times a day it would be best. I give my easy keeper mare a good mineral supplement with choline which is supposed to help obese horses keep the weight down....that would be the only thing fed besides the hay, and of course a salt block and plenty of fresh water. Good luck.

  • 1 decade ago

    Yah, Amanda said it for me. You could also give her a salt lick so that she will drink way more water. By drinking more water she may slow down on the hay and she will urinate alot aswell and detoxify her body while doing so.

    You could also buy this supplement powder. I can't remember the name of it at the moment. Ask your vet when he comes by. But it aids in maintining a average or faster metabolism and you just give her the supplement with food or in water, whichever you perfer, it just would help her to metabolize food at a healthy rate in case she's a little slow from the lack of excersize.

    Don't forget to walk her aswell. Of course don't ride her or any hard excersize, but leading her around everyday for 20 minutes will stretch her legs and prevent stiffness instead of her just sleeping and eating etc. And will burn at least some calories.

    Hope this all helps. :) Good luck! Hope she becomes sound again soon :)

  • 1 decade ago

    Sounds like she may have a thyroid issue as well. When the vet comes get him to draw blood to check her levels.

  • 1 decade ago

    hmm... well my trainer soaked her horse's foot in warm water and put a boot on it. She thought it was foundering, but it turned out she had an absess and now she is fine! Good luck!

    Source(s): me
  • 1 decade ago

    just get her a round bale of hay and she'll be fine. if she pigs out on hay it won't hurt her. leave her lots on water and she'll be fine.

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