eArticlesOnline.com article directory
Free Online Articles Directory



Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

Conditioning And Feeding Horses

By: Jimmy Cox Home |


Horses confined in stables are being kept under artificial conditions, and in consequence skill is required to maintain them in good health. Living under natural conditions the horse eats grass; he eats for a very considerable number of hours each day and during the night; he feeds in small quantities at frequent intervals, and he drinks whenever he feels inclined. He has a very small stomach for his size. These facts should be borne in mind when horses are in the stable, and the less the natural conditions are disturbed the better.

Horses intended for hunting during the season should be brought in from grass during July or, at the latest, August. During July the grass begins to lack the nutritive qualities which it had in May and June, and the horse will come up in less soft condition if he has been given a feed of 5 lb. oats daily the last few weeks at grass. This extra condition is due partly to the hard food and partly to the fact that the oats give the horse more energy and that he therefore takes more exercise on his own.

Great care must be taken when the horse is brought in that he does not take cold and start coughing. During the first week in the stable he should not be made to sweat, and the door of the stable should be kept open night and day to give all possible air. Nothing is more likely to start a cough than a stuffy stable.

During the first week in the stable the horse should be given damp bran and hay with little or no oats. The change from grass to dry food is likely to cause indigestion and diarrhea. If at the end of the first week the diarrhea persists, the horse should be given bran mashes for twenty-four hours, and then physicked with an aloes ball or 1 1/2 pints of linseed oil. If the horse comes up from grass in poor condition, worms should be suspected, and he should be treated accordingly.

When the horse has got well over the physic the oat ration may be raised gradually as the exercise is increased. Plenty of walking exercise is essential at this time, and the owner need have no fear of giving too much of it. The horse when out at grass takes slow exercise during the larger part of the twenty-four hours in a day, and is better for plenty of slow exercise when stabled. He probably enjoys it as confinement is unnatural.

The longer that slow work is continued the better for the horse. Fast exercise when in gross condition is liable to affect a horse's wind, damage his legs and work irreparable harm.

As the horse becomes fit slow trotting exercise should be given and steady trots uphill are excellent for muscling up the quarters. With this exercise about 8-10 lb. of oats a day should be sufficient with 2 lb. of damp bran added and about 14 lb. of hay. The corn should be given in three feeds, a little of the hay given after exercise and the bulk of the hay last thing at night.

If this treatment has been followed your horse should be in first-rate condition when he is called upon for fast work at the end of the cubbing season. He will require about 14 lb. of oats, 2 lb. bran and 12 lb. of hay daily. The quantity of corn should be varied with the work that is being expected from him, his size and his appetite. The food should be given in at least three feeds a day and may with great advantage be divided into four meals.

Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
World Renowned Vet Publishes Book On Everything You'll Ever Need To Know About Horse Healthcare!

Click here for FREE online ebook!

http://www.horsehealthcare.net/



Keywords: horse health care, horse health

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Articles Via RSS!

Recent Articles From

  • What Exactly Is Online Banking?
    By: Amy Nutt | Jul 28th 2009
    To put it simply, online banking is the banking of the future. It is how people can handle all of their banking needs right from their computer without ever having to get up to go to the bank. The services can be accessed at anytime and most banks will have all of their features available online plus some that may not be of ... Read

  • Ways To Operate A Business
    By: Obinna Heche | Jul 28th 2009
    Too many business planners end up spending time and money creating a plan that offers a detail for every little piece of their business. This is great for getting started to make sure nothing is left to chance in getting the business off the ground. Read

  • Planning And Developing Your Business
    By: Obinna Heche | Jul 28th 2009
    Every business venture, regardless of its venue or its objective begins with a basic idea, the simpler the better. Focus and expansion are much easier from the get go this way. Most importantly, this serves as the business foundation without which the business could not manage or even exist. Read

  • Ways To Guarantee A Failing Business
    By: Obinna Heche | Jul 28th 2009
    No one has ever started a home business with the intention of failing, yet there are five things they can do to make sure their business has little or no chance of succeeding. Read

  • Having A Great Home Business Plan
    By: Obinna Heche | Jul 28th 2009
    You already know that your business plan is going to be one of the most important things that you have as you start your home business. But now that you know that, how do you make sure your plan is out there on the top? Read

  • Organizing Your Business
    By: Obinna Heche | Jul 28th 2009
    Too many of todays small business owners are kept in the dark when it comes to the record keeping of their businesses. Read

  • The Online Banking System
    By: Obinna Heche | Jul 28th 2009
    These days, online and offline businesses have become tightly and neatly intertwined and dependent on one another, although each stands independent of the other. Read

  • Managing Your Business
    By: Obinna Heche | Jul 28th 2009
    Perhaps no single role in the entrepreneurial world has changed as much as that of the midlevel manager. It was perhaps garnered as much from poor ownership and Dilbert comic strips than any real hard data examining the cause. Read

  • Organizing Your Home Office
    By: Obinna Heche | Jul 28th 2009
    When it comes to running your own business you wear many hats. You are the boss, the supervisor, the secretary and more. With all of the jobs you do to run your business you need your time to be well spent. Read

  • Decorating Your Home Office
    By: Obinna Heche | Jul 28th 2009
    For those just beginning a home based business, whether working from or in the home, one of the last things usually considered in the beginning is decorating their office. Read


Use of this site constitutes acceptance of the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2005-2009 Free Articles eArticlesOnline.com