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Extreme Foamy Mouth When Eating, Question

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  • Extreme Foamy Mouth When Eating, Question

    Yesterday, about an hour after feeding, I was out and saw that Lil'Red had heavy, foamy, saliva all over his small-hole hay net and it was pouring out of his mouth. It was not slowing down his eating at all; he was munching down hay at his normal fast speed.
    I've been feeding my hays since middle of last year and it all has been quality hay--clean and weed free. No other of my horses were foaming.
    I watched him about 3 minutes & it seemed to be decreasing, so I went off to barn chores & came back later and everything was dry.
    But what happened? One of my crazy ideas was that a stink bug had crawled into his hay net overnight & then sprayed just as he was grabbing a mouthful near the bug, but, seriously, I just don't know what it was about.
    I am wondering if anyone else has had any experience with anything like this and what might have caused it.
    I've had horses since 1978, have fed many different horses, many different hays, and have never seen this happen. I am curious.
    There is no such thing as "bad" horsemanship or "good" horsemanship. There is simply Horsemanship or the absence thereof.

    www.oldmorgans.blogspot.com

  • #2
    A certain clover can cause slobbers. I can't remember which species, I'm sure someone knows off the top of their head. I was at a large breeding farm and one back pasture one year had all the mares slobbering from the clover they were eating in the field. I don't recall us having to treat them for it, but it was over 10 years ago...

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    • Original Poster

      #3
      Originally posted by Heliodoro View Post
      A certain clover can cause slobbers. I can't remember which species, I'm sure someone knows off the top of their head. I was at a large breeding farm and one back pasture one year had all the mares slobbering from the clover they were eating in the field. I don't recall us having to treat them for it, but it was over 10 years ago...
      Yeah, aliske (I am probably messing up the spelling) clover does cause slobbers. But there is none of that in my hay. I thought of that at the time, but I've never seen any clover in any of my hay ever. I don't think we have it out here in So. Calif. in our mostly desert grown hays.
      There is no such thing as "bad" horsemanship or "good" horsemanship. There is simply Horsemanship or the absence thereof.

      www.oldmorgans.blogspot.com

      Comment


      • #4
        My mare does a "foamy" mouth thing. She foams at the mouth.

        When: winter
        How: from eating alfafa pellets, or treats (Standlee Hay)
        How: eating some really GOOD chow.
        How: eating peppermints
        How: eating very tart apples :-)
        How: eating fresh pears off of our trees.
        How: she is working her bit in her mouth (no food involved btw)

        We have very little clover, but she knows where it all resides and keeps it well mowed, but I see ZERO foamy mouth when eating other feed or hay, when standing in the stall not eating, or any time else when the clover is present. But no clover slobbers.

        Foam and slobbers are not the same.

        Good chow makes a foamy mouth. Clover makes slobbers, iow drooling liquid from their mouths, or all the sudden they move their mouths and all this slobber (picture a saint bernard or mastif or blood hound) comes pouring out of their mouth. ICK.

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        • #5
          You have white clover in your hay - change hay
          "If you don't know where you are going, any road will take you there"

          Comment

          • Original Poster

            #6
            Originally posted by Woodland View Post
            You have white clover in your hay - change hay
            If only it were that obvious or easy...
            I've been feeding the same load of hays (3 different kinds) since last summer with no problems. Yesterday, when it happened, all 7 horses were fed from the same bales. This morning, I am into different bermuda bale but the same alfalfa & forage bales that were used yesterday.
            Of course, there could have been a very small amount of clover in one flake of one bale and he got it. But since I have yet to find anything in any of these hays other then what is supposed to be there (which has been a delight as in the past I have sometimes found many mystery plants in my hay), somewhat unlikely.
            And that is what confounds me.
            He drooled, slobbered & foamed for only a short while and then it was done. Never previously, and not since.
            I may just go with the theory that horses do these things on purpose to confound us!
            There is no such thing as "bad" horsemanship or "good" horsemanship. There is simply Horsemanship or the absence thereof.

            www.oldmorgans.blogspot.com

            Comment


            • #7
              In my (admittedly limited) experience we get slobbers from clover in the late summer or fall, not at this time of year.
              What's wrong with you?? Your cheese done slid off its cracker?!?!

              Comment


              • #8
                /waves hi to OldMorgans

                It would really surprise me if it was white clover that did it, but all kinds of things can grow in hay, and some horses are sensitive to things that others are not. (E.g. if my Morgan mare gets a supplement with flax seed in it, she stocks up and/or gets very swollen glands in her throat.)
                You have to have experiences to gain experience.

                1998 Morgan mare Mythic Feronia "More Valley Girl Than Girl Scout!"

                Comment


                • #9
                  We get that too, my mare gets it badly ... but it's always white clover time.

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