That's about how long Jedi has been at this little place here. When he came, he was very skinny. That had been put as an effect of the hard winter our area had endured. Remember my posts about the 'house deer' that were sleeping next to my house and eating everything in my yard that they could find? I could definitely understand that he may have lost a lot of weight over the winter.
When I bought him, I figured he could probably use about 200 pounds more weight in his body than what he had at the time.
Well, upon asking some very detailed questions of the former owner, I found out that it had been three or more years since Jedi's teeth had been floated--originally I'd been told they 'hadn't had him floated last year'. (True, but not the whole truth.)
For you non-horse people, horses' teeth grow throughout their lives, and through use develop sharp spots on their molars--from grinding feed as they don't chew moving their jaws up and down like we do but more side-to-side. These sharp spots and other unevennesses need to be floated--or rasped off--from time to time to enable better chewing of feed which means more digestibility and better utilization of nutrients. A horse given all the food in the world can still get skinny if its teeth aren't in good shape.
So, in the third week he was here, I had the vet check and float his (very sharp, very uneven) teeth. He didn't take to the new vet in the new environment concept at all, and we ended up having to give him quite a bit more tranquilizer than a horse typically needs to stand calmly while their teeth are worked on. (Like a lot of people, many horses aren't naturally chill while having dentistry done on them.) He spent a few hours after the procedure in a very dozy and drunk-like state until the sedatives wore off (sedation dentistry: keeping people safe and livestock with functional chompers.)
Having his teeth put to rights, along with offering him large amounts of hay, carefully measured (for weight gain but not overpowering his system) servings of grain, and the grazing season getting underway, has allowed him to make a noticeable increase in his weight.
The hips and withers are more padded now, the ribs less visible (even though his winter coat is all gone) and his belly is not so sharply tucked. In fact, in the last two weeks I've been slowly lowering the amount of grain he gets at each feeding while still allowing him a generous amount of hay and he grazes as much as he wants during 10 hours of turnout daily. I want him to gain some more weight yet, but not too much and not too quickly.
I don't think, based on his bone structure, that he will ever be one of those beefy brick houses of a Quarter Horse. In fact, the vet asked me, since Jedi didn't come to me (or his prior owner) with registration papers, if I was sure he wasn't actually a (smallish) Off-the-track-Thoroughbred (like the Poetess, only shorter). Honestly, no, no I'm not sure. I only know that he was sold to his previous owners as a Quarter Horse that was possibly appendix--meaning registered Quarter Horse with some Thoroughbred ancestors--and that he has the same sleeker body style as the other (registered) Quarter Horse I owned and sold almost a decade ago.




































