If you have found indications that you need to buy some supplements (whether for a competitive or debilitated animal, a growing foal, or even your pregnant mare), you want to buy what you need cheaply, but you also want top quality and the right ingredients. Some things to look for would be the following:
Citric Acid
Cobalt Sulfate
Copper Sulfate
Cyanocobalamin
d-Panthenol
Ferrous
Sulfate
Folic Acid
Niacinamide
Pyridoxine
Riboflavin
Sorbitol Solution
Thiamine HCl
You
also want to make sure it has a pleasant flavor like apple sweetened
with honey. Of course, giving them the right amount is important so
read the recommendations given and follow any precautions like keeping
the container closed tight and protected from light. You must also follow
any other specific feeding criteria specified by your vet.
If you are new to the world
of steeds, but are in love with them and trying to
learn everything you can about it, keep reading. The main difference
between horses and ponies is size. A horse stands 58 inches or higher,
and a pony is an adult equine that is smaller. (A fun side note to this
fact is that any normal variant on size can mean that stallion and mare
horses can together become the parents of an adult pony.) In some areas,
though, they say there is a distinct set of characteristic traits which
indicate that size is not the only factor. Shetland ponies are considered
by many as the prototypical pony, and its proportions are distincly
different than horses.