1. Eliminate all wasting of hay.
– All horses fed loose hay, even in feeders, waste a lot.
2. Minimizing the clean-up work of the feeding area.
– Open a round bale, and they will waste 50 % for you to remove.
3. Feed your horse full 2- or 3-string bales as they are, without anyone overeating.
– Feeding with full bales is very time-efficient.
4. Eliminate the risk of sand colic when your horse is fed on the ground.
– Horses naturally graze from the ground, but loose hay turns them into vacuum cleaners, sucking in everything beneath it.
5. Never again stuff a hay net.
– Stuffing hay nets is a tedious, boring, and time-consuming punishment.
6. Reduce the feeding work from taking minutes to taking seconds.
– Often quicker than feeding on the floor three times per day.
7. Eliminate all stress and competition when feeding groups outside.
– With continuous access, there are no more feeding times.
8. Never again have to do early mornings, stressful lunch, or late-night feeds.
– Choose the right feeder size and refill once anytime during a 36-hour window.
9. Never have to wait while your horse is eating before riding.
– When you come to the stable after work, he is never starving — ride immediately.
10. Reduce the need to feed your horse from 2-3 times per day on predetermined times to once anytime during a 24-hour window, without the horse overeating.
– Never rearrange the whole family’s schedule to fit feeding times.
11. Minimize the risk of respiratory problems due to hay dust.
– Dust falls off as the hay is pulled through the net, so what reaches the mouth is almost dust-free.
12. Let your horse eat fully relaxed, standing in perfect anatomical balance and in physiologically natural angles, making him stop when he has had enough — even if hay is left — just like nature intended.
– Experience shows that for a horse to stop eating while hay remains, he must have forgotten that the supply could ever end, and he must be completely relaxed.
13. Eliminate the risk of your horse getting stomach ulcers caused by traditional feeding routines, creating long nightly starvation periods.
– A horse’s stomach produces acid continuously. Without constant food to buffer it, the acid burns the unprotected upper stomach wall. (Today 60 % of all domestic horses and 90 % of performing horses suffer from this.)
14. Eliminate unwanted behaviors.
– Horses suffering from stomach ulcers are prone to nervous behavior.
15. Create an earlier unknown level of harmony.
– This becomes visible in the horse’s complete personality: stamina, acceptance, kindness, indulgence.
This is not an incremental improvement. This is a generational shift that horse owners instantly understand, love, and talk about.
Who’s ready to make feeding 15 times better?
#FamilyManagers #SpaceX #TractorSupply #Lowes #SlowFeeding #EquineInnovation #LowTechHighValue #HorseWelfare #TalentRetention #TexasManufacturing #JointVenture #MakingTheWorldBetter