![]() You’ll also note she seems relaxed and content (if I posted a video of her eating from a hanging haynet, you’d see her biting the swinging bag in frustration). If you watch the video, you can see my filly is using her lips and teeth in a natural way as she nibbles and “grazes” from the bag. ![]() Within minutes, my horses were nibbling through both the grate and the net. Considered another type of feeder featuring a grate with smaller holes, but I’m convinced the wooden box wouldn’t survive my horses, who might share DNA with beavers.įinally, eureka! Nearly at my wits’ end (and several hundred dollars into my slow-feeder experimentation) I stuffed one of my haynets full of hay, tied back the fastener strings in a series of knots that my horses can’t untie or get caught in, and placed it in the grate feeder and locked it up.While openings are small enough my horses can’t get their feet in them they’re too large to slow down my vacuum-like herd. Tried a feeder with a “slow” grate on the top.However, our desert climate and is extremely hard on vinyl, and I couldn’t bear the cost for what could possibly be a short-term solution. Looked at ingenious but relatively expensive feeders made of PVC that spin and “grow” hay as the horse engages in natural grazing behaviors.Tried hanging haynets with small holes, but fixing them high enough to eliminate hoof-entrapment issues left my dressage horse with a sore neck and my allergy-prone gelding with hay-dust-related respiratory distress.I considered separating him from my two barefoot horses, but group housing is too important to my herd’s happiness. Investigated “pillow net feeders” (a neat idea) and full-bale nets, but these posed foot-entrapment risks for my one shod horse.So, like any good, obsessive horse owner, I started searching for a solution that worked for my sweet filly’s health, my small herd’s idiosyncrasies (they’re kind of a high-maintenance bunch), and my own time management and budget constraints. Even my regular feeding program of three hay meals a day and limited concentrated feed left her with severe ulcer attacks. ![]() But I didn’t fully understand the importance of slow feeding forage until my filly started exhibiting signs of equine gastric ulcer syndrome, which is exacerbated by infrequent feedings. ![]() Made in the USA from heavy-duty vinyl and poly webbing, this slow feeder holds up against even the toughest of horses. Still, research studies, veterinarians, and equine nutritionists constantly recommend slow feeding for the management of everything from equine Cushing’s disease to equine metabolic syndrome to behavioral issues. The NibbleNet Slow Feeder was designed to simulate grazing, with a one-bite-at-a-time concept for a more natural method of feeding. For most of us, that’s just not practical. Depending on your horse’s size and nutritional requirements, that means 15 to 30 pounds of hay divided into small meals throughout the day, which also means you could basically spend your whole day feeding horses at regular intervals. We all know our horses should eat small amounts of forage frequently. ![]()
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