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Slip up, wrong feed

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  • Slip up, wrong feed

    So I go out to the barn to ride this morning and it 's just after feeding time, I go in and pet my horse and look into his feed bucket and see he has the wrong feed! He has a very sticky looking sweet feed instead of his usual Safe Choice pellets.

    I told the a trainer/manager and she said "oh that's not a problem, I will go get the right feed"
    Hold on a minute, not a problem for who? My horse just ate half a meal of the wrong feed! This is a problem in my opinion.

    I have been out of the country for a month doing equine studies and have only been home for a few days. They got new stable hands while I was gone and they don't speak english. This is the first time I've been out at feeding time since I've been home for only 3 days, so it almost makes me nervous that this isn't the first time he has gotten the wrong feed. I'm very upset as this is a relatively new horse and we're still in the "honeymoon phase" and I'm obsessed with him, he's my dream horse (young, fancy warmblood jumper) and I feel like he gets treated as dirt. This is not our usual barn, I have only been here for 2.5 months, I just wanted to come home for the summer and brought him with me--so maybe they don't care about him because we're a short term boarder? The facilitiy is very nice, 2 barns, 56 stalls, indoor arena...but the management is apparently awful.

    How big a deal would this be to you??? Am I overreacting?


    Aside: This barn also refuses to turn him out at night so that they can water the pastures every night. So he gets about 1/2 the turnout time he should get plus he's getting bleached out. They refuse to let him go out at night. We arent even having that bad of a drought, who runs the sprinklers at their barn EVERY day on EVERY pasture???
    Did I mention they rarely give him enough hay and his stall was dirty and had almost no shavings in it today?

  • #2
    IMHO its time to find a new barn, depending of course on how long you are home for, and if you have time to be there each day to make sure your horse has enough hay, bedding, feed ect.
    Sorry its not the best situation, we board other peoples horses and they all get treated as if they were our own, everyone has plenty of food, hay water, and turn out. The conditions you describe are NOT good for business and your BO will soon find that out.
    Kim
    If you are lucky enough to ride, you are lucky enough.

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    • #3
      Well about turn out at night, were you aware when you started boarding there that they would not turn out at night? If so you have no dog in that fight and maybe buy him a fly sheet with UV protection to wear while he's out in the day. I bet they have nice pastures if they water them every night The feed, well if it was your agreement that he was suppose to have a certain feed then they are breaking the contract and I would be concerned. Sweetfeed isn't going to hurt him persay, that is what our boys eat, but if you want a certain feed then they need to feed as you agreed. Some barns don't put in a lot of shavings because they tend to get more messy when they have a lot of shavings but there should be enough shavings for protection and prevent slippage. If the stall was dirty maybe it was around cleaning time??? If not and they just let it stay dirty alot then thats a concern for thrush and other issues. What is rarely enough hay? If they have nice pastures they may not hay alot in the summer. Our horses don't get any hay in the summer when the pasture is nice and the only time they may get it is if they come in for bad weather and then they get a flake maybe 2 for the night. If he is maintaining weight and has nice pasture I wouldn't worry alot about the hay. If it was me I would probably move my horse to a more suitable facility that can meet my needs. Good luck.
      Horses aren't our whole life, but makes our life whole

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      • Original Poster

        #4
        When I began boarding there they turned him out all night, right after dinner until breakfast. Somewhere along the way they started turning him out during the day instead--but I was never informed of the change, I simply found him in his stall when he should have been out and asked someone why.
        His tail and forelock are the main things getting bleached so I don't know that a fly sheet would really help that.
        His stall wasn't dirty like piles of manure, it was dirty like brown, dusty shavings looked like actual dirt in his stall. The stalls are usually bedded very thickly with nice wood shavings.

        Maybe I'm just being too picky...maybe my standards are too high. I'm only there for 2 more weeks, might end up leaving a week early though, it makes me nervous.

        Comment


        • #5
          I used to make a big deal when this happened with Sansibar when he was still being ridden since he would colic so many times and was on an extremely schedualed and very expensive diet and we had spent thousands trying to get his stomach back to that of a normal horses. If they would forget supplements or do his feed wrong it could have lead to colic and some times things like that actually did lead to his colic incidents.

          You are not over reacting at all, of course you want your horse fed properly incase any thing ever does happen you will know what diet your horse is on.

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          • #6
            Honestly, taking him back to his regular barn early is probably worth the piece of mind. I took my horse home a month and a half earlier than I moved back home - the care at the first barn was not up to my standards and knowing I wouldn't be able to be there every.single.day scared me. I would rather not see him for a month and KNOW he's being taken care of.
            My CANTER cutie Chip and IHSA shows!
            http://www.youtube.com/kheit86

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            • #7
              Not over-reacting !!!!!!!!!!!

              Cut down on your stress and worry ~ move him ~ ASAP ( when your schedule allows the move). Not worth the risk - yes this is a big deal ~~ the correct feed is tremendously important - this is a red flag. IMHO ~ they have shown you what they are like as far as barn management * as Oprah would say don't ask them or rather allow them to show you a second time. GOOD LUCK ~ You know what you need to do!
              Zu Zu Bailey " IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE ! "

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              • #8
                maybe you should have left him where you stable most of the time. doesn't sound like the smartest move to take him "home", especially since You aren't There.

                Comment


                • #9
                  I could deal with the change in turnout, even though it might irritate me a little since you agreed to night turnout when you moved there. However, I would not deal with someone feeding my horse the wrong grain and then telling me it's no big deal. Switching grains abruptly could cause a big problem for your horse, so I'd definitely think about taking your horse home early. It stinks they are doing that to you!

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