Standlee Hay

Products - Timothy/Alfalfa Pellets

Description

The Standlee Hay Company provides a 50/50 blend of premium alfalfa and timothy grass hay forages to produce this specialty hay forage pellet.  This pellet combination is an excellent maintenance energy source, delivering balanced nutrition for animals requiring maintenance levels.  The relative feed value of 115 promotes a wide variety of uses.  This pellet is low in sugar (8%) and is considered a low non structured carbohydrate (8%).  These pellets are certified noxious weed free.

Analysis

Protein - Not Less Than 8%
Crude Fat - Not Less Than 1.8%
Crude Fiber - Not More Than 35%
Moisture - Not More Than 12%

Ingredients: Sun Cured Alfalfa, Timothy Grass Hay Forages

Feeding Instructions

Alfalfa/timothy pellets should be fed at ground level and can be sprinkled with water for any animals that may have dental issues, feeding disorders and that are prone to choke.  All forage grazing animals need long stem forage in their diets. When feeding bagged hay forage products, The Standlee Hay Company also recommends that these products not be an animals’ sole source of forage when long stem forage is needed for normal digestion processes. We recommend that you feed by weight and not by volume.  1-2% of a horse’s weight should be fed daily in hay forages.  This amount may vary depending on the animal’s needs and the horse’s activity.  Therefore if a horse weighs 1,000 lbs and is a performance horse, 20lbs of forage would be sufficient, however, consult with a veterinarian or nutritionist for specific needs for your animal(s).  Always use the concept which is “a pound of hay is still a pound of hay”.  This means the caloric values really do not change, when an animal eats a pound of hay, regardless of how it is, long stem hay, hay cubes or pellets, as long as all are the same type forage.  They can vary a little, from stem hay coming from field A, hay cubes coming from field B and hay pellets coming from field C.  If they all came from the same field, same cutting, pretty safe the caloric values will be real close to the same. Make feed changes gradually over a period of 7 days. 

The most important thing in a horse’s diet is water. Provide plenty of fresh clean water at all times. 

Consult your veterinarian or nutritionist to develop a total health care and nutritional program for your animal.  All health care programs should include regular deworming, vaccination and dental care.




© 2012 Standlee Hay Company, Inc.