The One Treat on the Planet
That is Absolutely
Good for your Horse!
As many of you know, we train with treats. Once the horse has said I trust you, of his own free will with no strings attached, he will become a very willing partner. We have seven horses and every one of them will do anything in the world for us… IF they understand whatever it is we’d like for them to do… IF we can communicate that wish to them in a clear and intelligible manner. It’s all about the communication! And I’ve never found a better way of confirming their understanding of communication than the concept of You do something I like and I’ll do something you like. See Our book Training with Treats.
We do not give treats to our horses just because they are cute, or just because we love them. We use treats exclusively for training. And boy do they work! Can you imagine how much easier it would be to communicate with a horse who has a vocabulary and can actually think?
I began the process not unlike Benji’s training began by pointing out to Cash what the word foot actually means, and what action I was requesting. I put my hand behind his knee and lifted his leg into sort of a Spanish walk position. All the while saying, “Your foot, your foot” over and over. Then I’d say “Good boy” and give him a treat while still holding his leg up. Only then would I lower his foot back the ground. In very short order I was no longer lifting the leg, but merely touching his knee and he would lift it up himself. And soon after that all I needed were the words and a bit of hand motion. It was fun to watch his comprehension unfold, very similar to Benji’s.
Maybe it’s because I’ve grown up with a dog training mentality, but frankly I wouldn’t know where to start if I were to attempt to teach this without the treat. Whatever route that might take I’m certain Cash would not have understood it so quickly. He wouldn’t have grasped my communication so readily. Nor would he have been as motivated to reach, and understand, and do. In other words he was enjoying the process, which made both of us happy. And lo and behold, he was also learning that when I asked for something new, something he had never done before, he’d get that brain engaged quickly because there might be something good in it for him. He was seriously focused on figuring it out.
So maybe you can imagine how worried I soon became about the number of treats I was using during any given session… because every treat I experimented with was loaded with sugar, molasses and/or grains that turn to sugar in one form or another, or soy, or hydrogenated vegetable fats or oils (trans fats), or artificial (chemical) preservatives. Read the labels. They’re scary.
Then suddenly I discovered a brand new product, made by a company who apparently actually cares about what’s good for our horses:
None of the ingredients mentioned above are in this treat. None! Zero!
This is the singular best treat on the market as far as I’m concerned because Omega Fields’ Omega Nibblers® Low Sugar & Starch treat is the only treat on the market that uses 99.9% pure Non-GMO human-food-grade stabilized flax! This treat is actually good for your horse. 15 of these treats equal the same Omega 3 values as a half cup of Omega Horsehine Omega 3 Supplement and your horse will shine, inside and out!
Omega 3s are absolutely essential to your horse in so many ways! They fight inflammation, they support and build the immune system, improve bone and joint health, restore cracked and brittle hooves and support strong solid hoof growth, they can eliminate sweet itch and bug-bite sores, are recommended for horses with insulin resistance and Cushings, and can reduce symptoms of metabolic syndrome, all while promoting shiny, healthy coats and smoother skin texture! Our Stormy looks like she has been shellacked. Seriously. It’s the shiniest winter coat I’ve ever seen.
Every domestic horse on the planet needs Omega 3 supplementation because no one, horse or human, can manufacture their own Omega 3s. A horse in the wild will get his Omega 3 needs from the many varied kinds of fresh native grasses that have never been exposed to chemical fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, and never been GMO’d. Domestic pastures virtually always come up short, and hay loses its Omega 3s when it is cut and dried, so the horse (like the human) needs Omega 3 supplementation.
But without the molasses and/or grains with high levels of non-structural carbs that turn to sugar (all grains do) the minute they enter a horses body (or a human’s body for that matter). Like Corn or corn by-products, wheat or wheat middlings, oats, etc. Even carrots and carrot by-products carry a high glycemic index. Dr. Mark DePaolo, DVM says, “Horses are not designed to eat sugars or carbohydrates. ALL grains, when digested, are processed and metabolized as sugar which is detrimental to your horse’s health and well-being.” Also these sugars load up your horse with high doses of Omega 6, an inflammatory when not balanced properly with Omega 3.
And without soy. No Soybean meal or soybean oil. According to Dr. DePaolo, “Soy is highly estrogenic and should never be fed to either sex of horses, especially those that are already suffering from any type of metabolic disorder like Hypothyroidism, Insulin Resistance or Cushing’s Syndrome. And 99.9% percent of soy included in human and horse food is genetically modified to be Round-Up Ready. Glyphosate, one of the active ingredients in Roundup, is the leading cause of leaky gut syndrome in horses. Leaky gut syndrome can cause food allergies, diarrhea, mal-absorption syndrome, colic and irritable bowel syndrome.
“Phytates in soy are also undesirable. They will bind to certain nutritional minerals in a horse’s diet and prevent them from being absorbed into the body. It is very common for a horse that is being fed soy to be lacking Iron, Manganese, Chromium, Cobalt and sometimes Selenium when tested utilizing horse hair analysis. These minerals are very important in the production of proteinaceous connective tissues such as tendon, ligament, joint cartilage, hoof and hair coat.”
Nibblers® Low Sugar & Starch contain no hydrogenated vegetable oils, all of which put high levels of unbalanced Omega 6s into your horse which cause free-radicals and inflammation when not balanced properly with Omega 3s.
Nibblers® Low Sugar & Starch have a low NSC rating of 14.4 (a measure of Non-structural carbs, which turn to sugar immediately upon entering the horse’s body). If you are currently using another treat, I encourage you to go read the label. I have for every major treat out there. You will find no other brand using human-food-grade flax. And you will find many treats filled with sugar, molasses, grains, soy and vegetable oils. Now read the ingredients for Omega Fields’ Omega Nibblers® Low Sugar & Starch treats: Stabilized Ground Flaxseed, Stabilized Rice Bran, Alfalfa Meal, Beet Pulp, Yeast Culture, Salt, Natural & Artificial Apple Flavor, Mixed Tocopherols (Natural Preservative).
As you can tell, I am truly excited to find these people! I no longer worry about over-training and feeding too many treats. Ever!
Check them out: Omega Nibblers® Low Sugar & Starch
From Omega Fields. The people who seriously care about your horse’s health.