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- Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!decwrl!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!lynx!nmsu.edu!dante!kcarver
- From: kcarver@dante.nmsu.edu (Kenneth Carver)
- Subject: Heaves (was: Feeding Old Horses)(LONG)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.050416.23938@nmsu.edu>
- Summary: Heaves can be controlled without medication.
- Keywords: heaves
- Sender: usenet@nmsu.edu
- Organization: New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM
- References: <9730085@hpfcso.FC.HP.COM> <1drjhfINNr2a@gazette.bcm.tmc.edu> <1992Nov11.233927.33635@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 05:04:16 GMT
- Lines: 63
-
- In article <1992Nov11.233927.33635@watson.ibm.com> mchugh@watson.ibm.com (Mary McHugh) writes:
- >I now mix 50 lbs. of Blue Seal Rebound (sweet feed for heavey horses
- >which contains beet pulp and has no oats),
- >50 lbs. of BS Charger (similar to Pacer, but higher protein), and 50 lbs. of
- >BS Demand (complete pellet especially formulated for weight gain).
-
- I'm glad you discovered the special feed for controlling heaves. My
- stallion developed heaves in the late '70's. Therahist powder helped
- a bit, but left much to be desired. I had Shane allergy tested, and
- the University of Pennsylvania supplied me with antigen vaccine. It
- was no help. Dunking his hay in water did not help. This went on for
- most of a year, then a friend gave me a copy of an article from Horse
- of Course magazine that told of the special feed. I immediately put
- him on Agway Respond. Like the Blue Seal Rebound, it is a complete
- feed without oats, and uses beet pulp for the roughage. Within a
- couple days, he had no symptoms whatsoever. Some time later, I put
- him in with some other horses. Not wanting to put the others on
- Respond, I tried Shane on his usual sweet feed and timothy hay once
- again. In no time, his heaves came back. I reluctantly put all the
- horses on Respond, and once again, he was symptom-free in a couple days.
-
- When I moved to Arkansas, where Agway feed was not available, I once
- again tried Shane on ordinary sweet feed and timothy. This time, his
- heaves did not return. I am now in New Mexico, and he is on alfalfa
- and doing fine at age 27. I can only surmise that New Jersey's air
- pollution may have been a factor.
-
- What is annoying is that none of the veterinarians I consulted had
- suggested the special feed. I hate to suggest it, but the profit
- motive may be involved. Achieving a "cure" with feed makes purchasing
- medication unnecessary. Purina is now making Respond, although it is
- difficult to get in some areas. The formula is also available as
- Manna Pro's Sweet Rely and as Wayne Feed's New Hope. Here is the basic
- formula:
- cracked corn..........450 lbs.
- dried beet pulp.......250 lbs.
- wheat bran............150 lbs.
- soybean meal..........100 lbs.
- cane molasses..........50 lbs.
- dicalcium phosphate....10 lbs.
- salt...................10 lbs.
- (feed supplement for vitamins A and D)
-
- I salute Mrs. Barbara Montgomery of Framingham, MA, who developed the
- formula about 20 years ago, and R.A. Greene, DVM, who tried desperately
- to get the veterinary community to acknowledge the feed's value. "Mrs.
- Montgomery used the feed successfully to reclaim over 40 horses in all
- stages of heaves. Some of them were in near terminal condition when
- placed in her care. With one exception, a horse that died within 36
- hours of its arrival at her farm, every horse was returned to useful
- working condition...and remained that way as long as the program was
- adhered to." In addition to the special feed, the horse should have
- 24 hour access to the outdoors, or a stall that is kept scrupulously
- clean. Wood chips, shavings, or dust-free sawdust are the preferred
- bedding. Any bedding that a horse would be tempted to eat, such as
- straw, should be avoided.
- There is no reason for any horse to suffer with heaves.
-
- --Ken Carver
-
-
-
-
-