Feeds a Horse Should NOT Recieve
Not all feeds found on farms are safe for horses. Here are some things to aviod:
- Urea (non-protein nitrogen supplement)
- Rumensin (a cattle growth promotant found in livestock minerals)
- Selenium
- Frozen Silage
- Commercial cattle and chicken feed
- Mouldy hay (particularly clover)
- Salt water
- Mouldy grain
- Treated grain that will be used for seed
- Hay containing blister beetles or known poisonous weeds
- Hay older then one year
- Large amounts of bread
- Poisonous plants
- Japanses yew
- White snakeroot
- Leaves from black walnut
- Red maple
- Apricot
- Oak and Apple trees
- Some fescue grasses
- Bracken fern
- Horsetail
- Deadly nightshade
- Poison hemlock
- Larkspur
- Milkweed
- Jimson weed
- Rhubarb leaves
- Ragwort
- Oleander - Don't permit your horse to lick old fertilizer bags (ammonia poisoning), old paint, pesticide containers (arsenic poisoning) and discarded batteries (lead poisoning).
- Feed additives, such as growth stimulants and antibiotics, have not been proven beneficial to horses. With this in mind, feeds containing these products should be avoided.