I was a full time grass hay only in the begining, but have forced myself to switch. The hardest thing also was to make him a pen that he could be in seperately as They were in a big turn out together. But it took some time but I finally got him a pen made, now we have the barn done and he has his own stall. The nice thing about the alfafla pellets is that they are a consistant level since they are process, where when you feed the hay or hay cubes one batch might be richer than the next and could cause upset tummies if you have a sensitive horse, (which my guy was). The pellets are processed to be within a certain protien percentage. As far as his body condition. Older horses begin to lose that topline and begin to look hollow in the hip. Some can build up that muscle and some can't. But in any horse if you notice the hollowness in the hips it is generally a lack of adaquate protien. My guy was hollow, like you said looked like a rescue case, the alfalfa pellets did him wonders since alfalfa is higher in protien then grass. But you also need the right amount of fats which they get from the senior. The hardest thing is getting the diet balanced right, which takes time.
I don't like to feed tons of supplements and my horses make it easy because they don't like stuff on their food. Tried to give the oral joint supplements but couldn't get them to eat it even mixed with their grain, they'd just turn their noses up and go eat their hay. So now I just give them the injections, works better anyway. So it took a while for me to find the diet that gave them what they needed . They some times get a little corn/veggie oil for their coats but other than their Psyillium they don't get supplements.
Hope this helps
Nutrietion and Reproduction/Genetics some of my favorite things.
