Horse mash recipe?

Hello everyone!

I'd like to occasionally feed my pony a bowl of mash, but don't want to always buy the expensive ready-made stuff. My question is: do you know any recipes for mash?

Ideally, you could make a dry mixture and then simply add hot water to it in the stable. Does anyone have any ideas/experience with this?

Thanks in advance!

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verreisterNutzer
5 years ago

Why do you want that?

Horses are not made to take hot meals. Mash is a dietary diet that is available because it should pass the digestive tract as quickly as possible and without stress.

clsmsnn
5 years ago
Reply to  Ronja14x5xx

So my horse actually gets Mash every day as it gets too cold with oats and other food takes up very badly. Nevertheless there is absolutely no health problems😌

So you absolutely don’t have to worry about Mash

LGπŸ€“

friesennarr
5 years ago
Reply to  Ronja14x5xx

It is a dietary supplement that is used to feed empty digestive systems. It’s free for feeding.

As Lynanea wrote, horses do not need warm meals – even no frozen (like ice in summer).

Horse is totally happy with hay, straw, grass and branches.

GillyDi
5 years ago
Reply to  Ronja14x5xx

Is there anything else, even on Wikipedia, it’s in it. From veterinarians and similar one also hears nix different ones, and in all the theory tests of the FN one also learns nix different ones.

The question is now more where you get your information…

verreisterNutzer
5 years ago
Reply to  Ronja14x5xx

From veterinarians, from clinics, from THPs,…

What do you think it’s for? And more importantly, why do you even want to feed this?

clsmsnn
5 years ago

Yes with the first one you are quite thankful that you made me aware of itπŸ™‹πŸΌ ♀️
and with the second I would like to make you aware that you do not know how to hold my horse and train

verreisterNutzer
5 years ago

So you absolutely don’t have to worry about Mash

Very clever to close from a single horse to all others.

So my horse actually gets Mash every day as it gets too cold with oats and other food takes up very badly.

What’s the mash? If the horse is “happy” with oats, I would think about the training and the posture.

DasRufzeichen
5 years ago

Maybe it helps you:http://pferdemist-entsorgen.de/mash-pferdefutter/

Or that:https://www.pferdchen.org/Pferde/Ernaehrung/Pferdefutter/Mash.html

However, water is added to all recipes during preparation.

friesennarr
5 years ago
Reply to  DasRufzeichen

Aua – the recipes are already hurting me in my eyes.

Punkgirl512
5 years ago

Mash isn’t really expensive now… about 15 euros for 7kg, I find little. At least those of St.Hippolyt, they’re all right.

In principle, however, it is not so advisable to change the feed again and again. A horse is set for uniform feeding.

PeppysGirl
5 years ago
Reply to  Ronja14x5xx

But this makes absolutely no sense, except in the case of illness or colic. A horse does not need a change in food and does not need a regular mash if there are no health reasons.

We always call Mash “astronaut food” – it’s a dietary food and only serves to get digested quickly from the horse, so it’s almost “pre-digested” and slips through the horse relatively quickly. Similar to if you eat oats, etc.;-)

Unfortunately, many horse owners think that one should do something good to the horses at times and then there is a mash here and there is a muesli – but that’s all completely unnecessary. Your horse is the happiest with his normal chuck. You can save the whole Shishi outside (and the money for it too).

Punkgirl512
5 years ago
Reply to  Ronja14x5xx

Yeah, I understood that – but for what?

friesennarr
5 years ago

Did your horse have a colic, a abdominal or intestinal clasp, or was it longer hard sick with fever and little food?

Only then is a mash useful to feed.

Making a rich mash itself is not cheap.

Depending on what the horse had, the linseed, the rind and oat glue were boiled with salt (green salt) and the linseed which was cooked separately was then stirred.

Depending on the problem, the whole is added to different herbs.

Dahika
5 years ago

My TA doesn’t hold any of these prefabricated mashes. And some dry stuff that you’re brewing isn’t a mash.

I’ll never feed my horse ready. I always cook it myself.

50 gr. brown (or yellow) linseed simmer for a time. Then mix with the chuck. The linseed can also be mixed with water into the microwave. It is important that a lot of mucus is created.

These prefabricated hassle me too little. And what you’d like shouldn’t have a slime. But the slime is good for the stomach.

Dahika
5 years ago
Reply to  Dahika

My horse always gets Mash if it has to stand for some reason **.