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The Water Cooler
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Horse Deaths
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<blockquote data-quote="OkieJoe72" data-source="post: 3926833" data-attributes="member: 48447"><p>In the truest sense, it is a processed food, but it does have a use. Basically, it’s just hay that is ground and pressed into cubes. I feed cubes to my horses during the winter to supplement the prairie grass hay. Alfalfa is to rich for donkeys and mules which is one of the reasons that I don’t put out alfalfa hay. The other reason is that it is pretty expensive so the cost can be offset by feeding a certain ration of cubes to the horses instead of just letting them free graze. The problem that has occurred with the recalled cubes is because some sort of animal(s) had died in the hayfield, and the animals were baled into the hay. This problem can just as easy occur in hay bales, but it probably wouldn’t have killed so many horses. On more than one occasion, I’ve found dead snakes in my hay bales.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="OkieJoe72, post: 3926833, member: 48447"] In the truest sense, it is a processed food, but it does have a use. Basically, it’s just hay that is ground and pressed into cubes. I feed cubes to my horses during the winter to supplement the prairie grass hay. Alfalfa is to rich for donkeys and mules which is one of the reasons that I don’t put out alfalfa hay. The other reason is that it is pretty expensive so the cost can be offset by feeding a certain ration of cubes to the horses instead of just letting them free graze. The problem that has occurred with the recalled cubes is because some sort of animal(s) had died in the hayfield, and the animals were baled into the hay. This problem can just as easy occur in hay bales, but it probably wouldn’t have killed so many horses. On more than one occasion, I’ve found dead snakes in my hay bales. [/QUOTE]
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