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Compounds
are consistent, economical to store and transport, and need
no mixing. Many of them include a syrup to make them more
palatable.
Nuts,
or cubes, are made from a variety of ingredients,
which are ground up, steamed and compressed. They are convenient,
although individually prepared feeds are perhaps more appetising,
more adaptable, more digestible and less expensive.
Complete
nuts, or a complete mix,
combine concentrates and roughage as a total diet.
This makes feeding easy, and helps to prevent allergies
to hay and dust, but more natural roughage would aid their
digestion.
Concentrate
nuts or mixes
contain varying amounts of protein, energy, vitamins and
minerals. They may be fed on their own with hay.
Coarse
mixes range between a simple mixture of cereals
and forage fibre to a high-protein mix containing soya meal,
beans, peas, and linseed. The ingredients may be rolled,
flaked, or micronised, and they are balanced with suitable
levels of oil, vitamins, minerals and trace elements.
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Types
of mix
(a) Coarse mix, one of
many varieties.
(b) Convalescent,
for resting or injured horses.
(c) Stud
mix, for mares and youngstock.
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