The Feb. 2011 article "Equine Nutrition Fact or Fiction" by Holly Werner Caccamise contains some dangerous misinformation about feeding alfalfa hay. It has indeed been linked to formation of enteroliths, particularly in California. I refer her to an article by a veterinarian at UC Davis' Gastroenterology lab, which can be accessed through this link: http://www.vetmed.ucdavis.edu/vsr/gastrolab/TOPICS.html I also urge readdressing this topic, as people trust your channel to provide quality information and if they nievely follow Ms. Caccamise's opinions, which apparently aren't backed by current research, they are placing their horses at risk. In the future, fact-checking before publishing would be very helpful.
I would like to know about alfalfa cubes. I heard that the cubeing process partially cooks the alfalfa and makes it easier to digest. I have a 26 year old mare and have been giving her cubes pre soaked and she has really been gaining weight, which she needed.
My mom lost her appaloosa mare to an intestinal stone. The vet sent it off and the lab results showed that she had a mineral imbalance from eating too much alfalfa hay and not enough grass hay. This was before we got her. So I have been reading all the research I can get on alfalfa that I can. Research shows that it should always be fed with a grass hay to balance it out at least 60/40. It can be too rich for some horses and can cause insulin spikes which can lead to stomach aches or founder this is also true with tifton 44 hay. It was designed to be fed to dairy cows and can have dangerous levels of sugar in it.
I have Thoroughbreds (racers) that were raised on alfalfa and high grain diets. One definately has had an ulcer before I bought him. My vet was concerned that he would not devour his grain all at once as horses do but would instead take a bite of grain, then a "dip" of water several times over, then go on to eating hay "saving" the grain for later. She said that is not normal. I did some research and found that alfalfa hay acts as a "buffer" in the horses' stomach, especially when an ulcer is present or has occured. I read this online. I buy 70/30 alfalfa/grass and/or 90/10. My vet wanted me to put him on Neigh-Lox but doing as I do with the alfalfa hay along with the amount of grain he gets, he is fine. I've done this for two years now.
I had a horse colic within two days of starting on Alfalfa and die... don't tell me it can't cause colic... Horses do not digest alfalfa... Alfalfa is a cattle feed.