A tip!
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Iron (Fe) is found in haemoglobin, myoglobin, cytochromes, and many enzyme systems. Iron plays a critical role in oxygen transport and cellular respiration. In the body of the horse we find about 70 mg iron per kg body weight. This means that a horse (500 kg) contains about 33 grams of iron. 66% is found in haemoglobin, 20% in myoglobin, 20% in transferrin (transport form), ferritin and hemosiderin (storage form). 0.2% is found in enzymes. Forage and by-product ingredients commonly contain 100-250 mg Fe/kg dry matter. Grains usually contain less than 100 mg/kg dry matter. Dietary iron absorption in the horse is likely to be 15 per cent or less. Iron utilization increases in iron-deficient rations and diminishes with higher than normal intakes of cadmium, cobalt, copper, manganese and zinc. The daily requirement for iron is about 40-50 mg/kg dry matter in ration. The requirement for iron should be met under normal feeding conditions.
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If you have a young growing horse that is either too thin or too well-fed (fat), you can easily adjust the amounts of feed you have to give it through the
In the Consultant version you can save horses, stables and feed lists on a drive that you 
When you are asked to provide an
PC-Horse will warn you and
Enter a tick in the tick-box to show that your horse is
You should monitor the weight of your young growing horse carefully, and compare with the expected 
Provide a better service to your clients! Send reports to your horse owners at regular intervals! PC-Horse allows you to
Make a habit of visiting www.pc-horse.com to check that you are using the
Use the 
Use the
Always try to use the total amounts of nutrients when you create a new feed or are changing the nutrient concentrations in a particular feed. Observe the information on the bag closely. You may find that the bag lists only what is added of a specific nutrient, instead of the total amount (in feed ingredients + added). For some nutrients over-supply may be a consequence.
In the 

