Progressive Nutrition's Equine
Guide # 116
Date: 11/6/2005
Which
Grain Mix Do I Use on My Horse?
Question:
How
do I determine what grain mixture is the correct one for
my horse?
Answer:
Because horses are continuous grazers and will graze up
to 18 hours/day while on pasture, we realize that forage
(pasture and hay) will make up 60 to 95 percent of their
diet.
Therefore, first we must recognize the
type of forage being eaten everyday. Grasses (Orchardgrass,
Bluegrass, Timothy,
Bluestem, Coastal Bermuda, etc.) and Legumes (Alfalfa,
Clover, Peanut Hay, etc.) differ greatly in quality and
quantity of protein and the amounts of major minerals
calcium and potassium, etc.
Second
we must realize the maturity of the plant when
harvested (eaten or baled) affects the palatability
as well as the availability of all the nutrients your
horse can digest from your forage.
Having
your forage analyzed will inform you of the total
protein, major and trace minerals as well as the
digestibility of each of those nutrients, which is
determined by a Relative Feed Value (RFV) score. The
higher the score, the more available the nutrients are
to the horse.
The following chart will help explain how the maturity
of your forage, will affect the Relative Feed Value (RFV)
of hay and pasture, so you can make the correct decision
on what Line of Progressive Nutrition feeds best
complements them.
RFV Quality
Standard of Forage PN
Line Best Complements
150 and
higher = pasture
(Prime) ProAdvantage
(extremely low starch)
103 to
150 = immature hay (Premium to Good) ProElite
(moderate starch)
75 to
102 = mature hay (Fair to
Poor) Premium (low starch)
Below
74 = overly mature (Reject or Bedding)
Senior (Complete Feed is 60% Forage)
The
majority of the hay we have analyzed on horse farms,
over the past three years, fits into the 75 to 102 RFV.
That is why many horsemen are achieving their desired
results when feeding our Premium Line. If the horses
are on improved pasture in the Spring, Summer and early
Autumn, we recommend switching to the ProAdvantage line.
Third we must determine the age, size,
reproductive status and/or performance level of your
horses and know the daily nutrient needs of each.
Fourth we must read the purpose statement on every
bag of feed you are considering. It will inform you if
this feed is formulated to complement your type of
forage and meet the nutrient needs of your horse. Then
read the amount to feed per day, for their size, age,
reproductive status or performance level of your horse.
These amounts are determined by the concentration of
nutrients in this grain mixture, which will complement
the RFV of the forage you are feeding. If the
recommended amount to feed per day is too high,
you can eliminate that feed from your selection.
Because if you feed less than the manufacturer
recommends, you are feeding a deficient diet to your
horse!! If the recommended amount to feed per
day is too low, select a different grain
mixture that its feeding amount listed per day is closer
to what your horse needs to maintain desired body
condition.
Be an educated consumer – read
the feeding directions on every bag and only purchase
what you need to make up the difference between what is
in your forage and what your horse needs. |