perchie.girl :
Quote:
I would be careful of feeding it to horses..... Especially since its a product of fermentation... If it still has a fizzy taste to it Definitely NOT. That Whole specter of Colic comes to mind. Though if it were dried or roasted to dry in the oven? maybe.
The goat digestive system is much more efficient than horses and can handle a wider variety of food anything that chews cud.
deb "off to go find out about horses and spent beer grain" I have had horses for 44 years and STILL learning there too. LOL
I think distiller's grains are cooked and used before the fermentation process part of the brewing, and only the liquid is used, but I'm not sure. If it is a product of fermentation then no, feeding it to horses is just asking for a horse with a belly ache, (or 8 horses with belly aches in my case
). I can't imagine poultry being able to handle eating anything fizzy or fermented either tho. Distiller's grains are listed on several different tags of poultry feeds I am using or have used in the past... but maybe in the dried form the fermented part is mellowed out, or they process them in some onther way before using them.
Just go get a bucket! If it's nasty then you have a nice new 5 gallon bucket to store poultry or horse and goat feed in lol.
Quote:
I would be careful of feeding it to horses..... Especially since its a product of fermentation... If it still has a fizzy taste to it Definitely NOT. That Whole specter of Colic comes to mind. Though if it were dried or roasted to dry in the oven? maybe.
The goat digestive system is much more efficient than horses and can handle a wider variety of food anything that chews cud.
deb "off to go find out about horses and spent beer grain" I have had horses for 44 years and STILL learning there too. LOL
I think distiller's grains are cooked and used before the fermentation process part of the brewing, and only the liquid is used, but I'm not sure. If it is a product of fermentation then no, feeding it to horses is just asking for a horse with a belly ache, (or 8 horses with belly aches in my case

Just go get a bucket! If it's nasty then you have a nice new 5 gallon bucket to store poultry or horse and goat feed in lol.