Category Archives: Handy Tips

My Horse Dunks better than Shaq…


Monday, April 22nd, 2013 | Filed under Handy Tips




TODAY WAS HAYDAY!

I was thrilled to receive my newest load of hay today from my favorite grower!

The haytruck arrives!

What is pictured here is a squeeze-full of orchard grass.  It is rich, green, moist, fragrant and I go through the effort to buy from this grower direct because my horses have looked great on his hay for the last two years.  To be totally fair, I do supplement this hay with 3-Grain or some other winterkeeper forage, but for the mostpart, I feel fortunate and do a little jig whenever the truck arrives.

Fresh, green and lovely!…

Here is another photo of my new pile of hay.  Yup, they dumped it like that on purpose so it is easier to stack in my inefficient (by squeeze standards) hay barn.

(time lapse… hay in barn, time to feed)

SERVING UP THE NEW HAY!

La-Laaa-Laadeeedah-La!  I’m singing as I serve up the first bale of lovely hay to all the milling about horses who were anxiously awaiting their first nibble as well.

“Here you go, Babies!  Eat up!  Look how much Momma loves you… Fresh, lovely hay for all you spoiled-rotten, fatty arbuckles!”  They love it when I coo to them…  ;)

The barn horses got all the hay that was littering the aisle that the hay stackers kindly made into a pile (thank you).  Now… which bale to open for the first taste for the rest of the horses?  Hmmmm.  Well, there is a very convenient bale sitting out here in front of the barn.  I tell myself that is is unusual for them to leave a bale outside the barn but they probably did that because it is missing a string and a bit loose – too tough to stack.  The bale does look a bit out of whack with its missing string but it is green and lovely so I decide to start with this single, lonely, in-front-of-the-barn bale..

(I’m so stoopid sometimes… but more about that later.)

I cut the strings and serve the lovely green flakes to Remi, Bodhi and the ponies.  Mmmmmmmm.  Yummy Yummy.  The horses are nickering their approval of their dining experience this evening.  Then, I go back to the barn and get two more lonely-bale flakes for Finn and Hayley.

I then trot off back to the barn to feed the dogs.  Once done, I follow my routine like Rainman and drone back up to Finn’s pasture to turn off their water.  It was then that I noticed the most peculiar behavior.

HE’S DUNKING.

Finn was dunking his hay…??

He was dunking his hay.

Huh?  I had never, ever seen him do this.  Why?  I sat there in awe as he systematically grabbed a bite, shook it, walked over to his personal waterer and dunked the bejeesus out of it.  Then, he’d slurp up the bits and swallow.  After a few times, he realized that he could be much more efficient and he brought over a huge clump and set it down next to his bucket.  Then, he picked up a clump, dunked, picked up another, dunked and then swished it all around before he started munching with his face down in the water.  Hmmmmmmm.  I looked at his flake to see if I missed something brown or odd.  Nope.  I smelled it.  Nothing.  I even picked at it to see if it had some sticks or a weed in there or some odd field plant.  It looked OK to me.  In fact, it looked really good to me.

Yup, no questions, he was dunking.

I ran inside to get my camera.  On the way out, I checked everyone else who had a flake from Finn’s bale.  No one was dunking or shaking it or having trouble with it or any other sign that would indicate something unforeseen was happening.   All the hay looked perfectly fine.  Hmmmmm.  Again.  No light is dinging in my brain.  Nothing. Nothing was telling me to actually check the REST OF THE BALE that was still sitting in front of the barn.  Nothing was telling me to think about this in sequence.  “I opened the bale and fed who first… where was Finn in the order?”  It didn’t occur to me because I was trusting my human eyes and nose.  It all looked fine and smelled great to me.

He walks over with a mouthful…

I then took these photos of Finn and his procedure figuring this was a good blog topic.  Snap, clickityclick.  I took a bunch of photos and started off, la-de-dah, to google this behavior and write about it.  But as I was motoring back to the office, I kinda Scoobydo’d to myself.  RutRow.  There has to be a reason, doesn’t there?

WHY DO HORSES DUNK?

Why do horses dunk their food?

Of course, the obvious suspects…  dry hay, stemmy hay, brittle hay, dry weather, scratchy throat, moldy hay, mouth issues, teeth issues, thirst, wanting more fragrant aroma … and that water hydrates the leaves so it is more like grass and therefore more palatable.

Then releases it.

There was one new internet theory that I thought was very interesting.  Horses can dunk hay if there is too much sugar in it.  It is suspected that the dunking dilutes the sugar.  You can test this if the water is brown instead of green.  Hmmm.

All of that made perfect sense.  Sure, I could understand why Finn would be doing this if I had dry, stemmy, dusty, moldy or brittle hay.  But, this hay was brand new and it was gorgeous, green and fragrant.  He has had his teeth done recently.  It is hot out but not that hot and besides, he has never soaked his hay before.  I did ride him today but not very hard.  And, I went out to check the color of the water in his personal bucket and it was greenish, not brownish.  Hmmmmm.

He brings over a larger pile and dunks more efficiently…

WHY FINN WAS DUNKING ACCORDING TO ME…

The only reason for this dunking behavior that I could surmise was this:  I had ridden him today and put him in the Bribe pasture after his trailer ride.  The Bribe pasture is the pasture I save for any horse who trailered that day.  He/She gets to spend time in there after the ride.  It is a reward of sorts.  The pasture has stuff to forage, is fun and no one else is in there so the entire place is open for whatever that horse wants to do.  There is plenty of fresh water and bonus of bonuses, it is higher than all other pastures so any horse in there can see all and lord over the entire ranch.

He swishes it around…

Finn had spent the afternoon in the Bribe pasture.  However, at dinner time, the Bribe Pasture switches instantly to the Punishment pasture because anyone up there gets released last and therefore fed last.  OOhhh.  This creates massive hollering and bellowing from the upper deck.  Almost all of the gifted horses who play in the Bribe pasture by day become hysterical wrecks at the dinner bell.

Finn is the worst of them all.  He cannot stand when anyone else is having dinner before his royal highness.  So, he runs and bucks and snakes his neck until someone gets his poor, miserable soul out of the Punishment pasture and back to his dinner.  Oh how the tides turn… only moments before he was sniggering at the others and lording over the roost.  But, the instant he hears hay barn doors opening, Finn throws the baby out with the bathwater and cries his heart out to be one of the herd again.

He gets it just how he likes it…

So, Finn had done an awful lot of hollering and carrying on before I rescued him and brought him to his regular pasture for his fabulous new hay dinner.  It was then that I surmised that perhaps he had run himself dry and just wasn’t in the mood for dry hay.

He needed to rehydrate his grass…

Hmmmm, he thought… I could add that bucket of water to this dry grass and Voila!  Moist salad!

And then he slurps it all up!

My Finn is one smart boy… why should he eat dry grass when he could plump it up?!

Atta boy, Finn, atta boy!

An hour later, he is finishing his dinner and done washing out that nasty smell…

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My STANDLEE Extravaganza and my products from EQUINE MEDICAL AND SURGICAL ASSOCIATES arrived!






(bowing towards Boston)

Yes, I’m still sick.

However, I was upright long enough today to venture down to my neighborhood Tractor Supply to use my Standlee Gift Certificate!

(The company contacted me and offered a month’s supply of Standlee feed for one of my horses in exchange for a review on HORSE AND MAN.)

I had to use the gift certificates before they expired.

My very generous Standlee Gift Certificate!

My very generous Standlee Gift Certificate!

WHAT TO GET??

I arrived at the store, Kleenex in pocket, to decide upon the feed I wanted for Rojo.

I have decided to feed the products to Rojo – my Mustang and the horse I will concentrate upon this Summer.

Rojo will be separated into his own pasture so I can watch how and what he eats.  Separating him also makes it easier to concentrate training with him.  (Finally, I will resume the Red Horse Diaries…)

That is my plan…

So, what to get for Rojo?

I adopted Rojo from the BLM Prisoner Trained Mustang Adoption program in Carson City, Nevada.  This was his photo in the Auction brochure.

I adopted Rojo from the BLM Prisoner Trained Mustang Adoption program in Carson City, Nevada. This was his photo in the Auction brochure.

THE STANDLEE ROW

I knew where they kept the Standlee products so I ventured over there, coughing a bit.

Oy, an entire row.  My dull brain was spinning.

Time to get some help.

I trudged over to the two workers in red vests.

Me:  I need to buy Standlee products…

Girl Employee:  OMG!  I LOVE STANDLEE PRODUCTS, YOU LUCKYYYY PERSON!  OMG!  I’LL BRING YOU OVER THERE.. (she continues to talk over her shoulder- very excitedly…) OMG MY HORSES LOVE THE HORSE TREATS AND I FEED THE ALFALFA PELLETS EXCLUSIVELY – WELL NOT EXCLUSIVELY BECAUSE I SOMETIME FEED THE CUBES, TOO – BECAUSE I HAVE WORKING COW HORSES AND THAT ALFALFA IS THE HIGHEST QUALITY WITH NO WASTE – NO WASTE!!

(She was practically salivating.)

Me:  I cannot feed alfalfa to my horses… I live in G-R-A-S-S Valley – we have too much rich, green grass… If I feed alfalfa, they will all founder.

Her:  THE BEST ALFALFA!…

I followed her with anticipation.

Me:  Do you have any grass hay bales?

Her:  No, only straw or grass/alfalfa.  BUT OMG THIS IS THE BEST STUFF  YOU WILL EVER SEE IN GRASS – THEY GROW THE BEST PRODUCT FROM THE BEST SEEDS AND THEY CUT IT AT EXACTLY THE RIGHT TIME AND PROCESS IT AT THE RIGHT TIME AND IT JUST GOES ‘POOF’ (gesturing widely) WHEN YOU CUT THE TIES AND IT IS SO (huge breath, finally) GREAT THIS PRODUCT, YOU FEED LESS AND IT WILL LAST FOREVER AND YOUR HORSES WILL CLEAN IT UP AND…

(For a moment, I thought I heard angels singing in the Standlee row…)

Me:  Does the hay seem drier than normal?  It seems expensive for a half of a bale… What effect does the compression have on the hay?

Her:  OMG!  IT IS SUCH GREAT QUALITY – JUST WAIT AND SEE WHEN YOU POOF IT OPEN!  YOU DON’T HAVE TO FEED AS MUCH AND IT SMELLS SOOOO GOOD.  JUST WAIT, JUST WAIT…

Me:  What about the stuff in the bags?  Are these the pellets and cubes?

Her:  OMG THE PELLETS ARE SO GREAT – AND THEY ARE SO MUCH BETTER THAN ANY OTHER PELLET.  YOU WILL SEE WHEN YOU OPEN THE BAGS AND… OMG, THE QUALITY IS AMAZING.  YOU WILL SEE AS SOON AS YOU SEE, TOUCH AND SMELL THESE PELLETS, OMG!

(She was starting to repeat herself and I was beginning to wonder if I should get her a glass of water to rehydrate after her hugely energetic display…)

Me:  But, I think the horses miss hay, you know…  They eat pellets so fast.  I’ve never fed just pellets… won’t they eat my trees and fences -or whatever – if they don’t have hay to keep them busy?

Her:  Are they on pasture?

Me:  Yes.

Her (wide eyed and getting excited again) :  OK OMG THIS IS PERFECT!!  JUST FEED THE PELLETS AND THE HAY AND IT WILL BE PERFECT!

Me:  Do you have grass pellets?

Her:  Yes!  Over here… see, the picture tells you what the bag looks like so you can easily choose which type of pellet you want!!  It is so easy!

(She was so sweet that I wanted to buy the product just to show her how her enthusiasm effected me…!)

Me:  OK.  I’ll get two compressed bales of timothy grass/alfalfa, 5 bags of orchard grass pellets and a bag of compressed straw.  I’ll use the straw in a stall or my trailer.

Her: Yayyyyyyy!  Oh you will love these products!  That’s why we have a whole row totally devoted to just Standlee products!

Me (smiling):  Do you have anyone who can help me get these bricks of hay into my car?

Her:  SURE!!

And with that, I slid the credit card gift card through the reader and pushed out with my haul, a bit rummy from the excitement on my flu brain.

But, I was smiling and feeling grateful.  I have never, ever received credit for a product.  I felt like a lottery winner or something!

And, I’m almost as excited to try the Standlee products as she was to tell me about them…  I’m going to have to call her Manager and tell him that she is a jewel.

–You will hear how it goes when I start feeding it to Rojo on Monday.

My haul... look at the horses peering at me through the car windshield - they can smell horse food, I swear!

My haul… look at the horses peering at me through the car windshield – they can smell horse food, I swear!  These are the compressed bales.  I think they weighed about 65lbs.  HEAVY.  I got alfalfa/timothy and one straw.

car2

These are the bags of orchard grass pellets. I have yet to open them and see the awesome quality…. but I will on Monday! Rojo is the lucky horse to be treated to a month of Standlee. We’ll see what the young Mustang thinks!

MY TICK SPRAY AND SUMMER ITCH CONCENTRATE ARRIVED ALREADY!

Boy oh boy, EQUINE MEDICAL AND SURGICAL ASSOCIATES are quick!

The RK Tick Spray arrived along with the Summer Itch/Eczema Oral concentrate already!

I could smell the tick spray through the box – you know that smell?…

When I opened the box, I was impressed with the no-frills packaging.

Inside were the products, the brochures and exact instructions on how to mix the concentrates and also on how to store the products.

Typical Doctor to market kind of stuff.

I loved that.  I felt as if I could picture the Vets in charge of this business deciding how to package the products.

Drs:  Yes, that looks fine…

Marketing Manager:  But how about a contrasting color or maybe a photo or drawing on the label?

Drs:  Huh?  What for?

Marketing Manager:  Well… for appeal to the buyer…?

Drs:  Appeal?  The products work better than any other product and they have scientific data to support the work.  What more appeal is there than that??!!

Marketing Manager:  ok.

–I will let you know what I think of these products as soon as I get them ready and apply them.  I don’t know how long it takes for the Eczema oral product to get into the horse’s system and be effective…

No frills, just the product, Ma'am.  The RK Tick Spray and the Eczema Oral Supplement from Equine Medical and Surgical Associates arrived FAST!

No frills, just the product, Ma’am. The RK Tick Spray and the Eczema Oral Supplement from Equine Medical and Surgical Associates arrived FAST!

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HORSE AND MAN is a blog in growth... if you like this, please pass it around!