Purina Race Ready Horse Feed
Purina Race Ready Horse Feed offers vitamin E to help exercising horses maintain muscle health and performance. It also contains added Thiamin helps enhance energy metabolism for fast recovery, balanced nutrition-no supplemental energy sources, oils, vitamins or minerals needed, concentrate feed designed to be fed with hay or pasture, energy-dense formula with beet pulp allows you to feed less, reducing the risk of digestive upset while enhancing performance at all distances, highly palatable with high molasses and oil content for optimal intake, satisfying even the pickiest eater in your stable, multiple energy sources with a precise blend of fat, fermentable fibers and soluble carbohydrates to support high performance.
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Guaranteed Analysis
Crude Protein (min)..........................................12.00%
Lysine (min)........................................................0.65%
Crude Fat (min)..................................................8.00%
Crude Fiber (max)...............................................9.00%
Calcium (min)......................................................0.80%
Calcium (max).......................................................1.30%
Phosphorus (min)..................................................0.50%
Copper (min)....................................................... 55 ppm
Selenium (min)....................................................0.6 ppm
Zinc (min) ..........................................................220 ppm
Vitamin A (min)...............................................3,000 IU/lb
Vitamin E (min)...................................................150 IU/lb
Feeding
Best Results
- Feeding rates will vary with size, age, temperament, health status, forage quality, climate and activity level. Feed at regular times - at least twice daily - with three daily feedings preferred. Let horses feed in a natural position from troughs with large bottoms, placed at normal head height or lower. Do not feed free-choice. Prevent the rapid eating by the horse of any feedstuff.
- Reduce and/or delay feeding a horse which is hot, excited or showing pain, has fever or diarrhea. Consult your veterinarian if any problems arise.
- Always feed a minimum of 1.0 to 1.2 lbs per 100 lbs of body weight of good quality, clean hay or the equivalent in pasture.
- Any feed changes should be made gradually over a period of 7 to 10 days. Changes in the rate of feeding should not exceed 1.0 lb per day for each horse.
- Have plenty of clean, fresh water available at all times. Provide your horse with access to salt. Maintain an effective control program for internal parasites. Have the horse's teeth examined annually and consult your veterinarian on a regular basis.
Changing To
- Make the feed change gradually over a period of 7 to 10 days.
- Mix the new feed with the old, gradually increasing the amount of the new feed while decreasing an equal amount of the old.
- Changes in the rate of feeding should not exceed 1 pound per day for each horse.
Caution