Elektra Magnesium 4 Horses

Elektra Magnesium 4 Horses Elektra Magnesium 4 Horses provides food grade flakes in small and bulk quantities to help keep hors It could be that magnesium is the missing element.

Owning and riding a horse can be an enriching experience; full of love, fun and friendship. It can however have its challenges if your horse becomes ill. Usually this is because of excessive stresses and depletion of important nutrients such as magnesium. Often the soil (and therefore grasses) can be magnesium depleted and high in sugars. This 'high sugar - low magnesium' diet is stressful for horses, as it produces too much acid and over-stimulation. Horses can become twitchy and jittery, and sometimes very grumpy! Some horses can even develop metabolic syndrome and horse diabetes with laminitis (hoof disease) from this kind of diet. Stresses can exacerbate a diet low in magnesium by causing further excessive magnesium loss. Many things can stress a horse from noise to travel, extreme weather conditions, ill-fitting shoes or untrimmed toes, performance pressures and much more. You may already be doing many good things to promote a healthy horse environment, but still something seems wrong. Magnesium (Mg) plays a number of important roles in your horse’s body. It is a vital mineral used in over 350 biochemical processes and involved in thousands of others as a vital co-factor to other nutrients. Magnesium is required for bio-electrical energy production because it is required to make ATP (the energy currency of cells) in the mitochondria. It also plays an important role in muscle and nerve function, including conductivity, relaxation and recovery (repair). Horses deficient in magnesium can show signs of nervousness, excitability, wariness, and have muscle tremors. Magnesium is known to help reduce equine obesity. It can also lessen the risk of laminitis in horses that are prone to it. There may also be other nutritional issues that have to be addressed - such as if the horse has acidosis and stomach ulcers. In this case it is advisable to consult a horse nutritionist to guide you through the protocols to restore health using the right foods. The most common mineral deficiency however is magnesium, which can manifest in different ways with different horses. According to horse therapist, Pauline Moore, because magnesium is needed for such a wide range of processes, signs of a magnesium deficiency can present in various ways, depending on genetics and prior stresses and traumas. She states that ten horses living in the same paddock may show signs of magnesium deficiency in ten different ways. According to an article in Equinews, “there is actually very little magnesium found in the extracellular fluid (about 1%), which is why testing blood for magnesium deficiency is relatively inaccurate. Gross deficiency of magnesium could be life threatening but is rarely seen in horses. The current uses of supplemental magnesium are aimed at resolving subclinical deficiencies, the very ones that are difficult to test for but whose signs are recognizable.”

Did you know that horses have acute emotional intelligence? It was found after testing, that horses have 17 different fa...
09/06/2023

Did you know that horses have acute emotional intelligence?

It was found after testing, that horses have 17 different facial expressions corresponding to different emotions. They can also read the emotions of humans - so you had better smile and be happy when they are looking at you!

Through a series of experiments, we can see how horses read human expressions. Please LIKE and SUBSCRIBE if you enjoyed! http://bit.ly/1Adl6ht **More info & ...

Horses have a big heart energy, which helps to keep our own electromagnetic field in balance when we are close. This is ...
08/06/2023

Horses have a big heart energy, which helps to keep our own electromagnetic field in balance when we are close. This is why horses have become 'therapy animals'. The electrical field of our horse, and that of our own, needs the support of magnesium to keep good rhythm and balance.

Recent studies conducted by the Institute of Heart-Math provide a clue to explain the two-way ′′healing′′ that occurs when we're close to horses.
According to researchers, the heart has an electromagnetic field larger than the brain: a magnetometer can measure the energy field of the heart that radiates from 2.4 meters to 3 meters around the human body.
While this is certainly significant, perhaps more impressive than the electromagnetic field projected by the heart of a horse is five times larger than that of a human being (imagine an electromagnetic sphere around the horse) and it can influence straight into our own heart rate.
Horses are also likely to have what science has identified as a "coherent′′ heart rate (heart rate pattern) that explains why we can feel better when we're close to them. Studies have found a coherent heart pattern or HRV to be a solid measure of well-being and consistent with emotional states of calm and joy-that is, we exhibit such patterns when we feel positive emotions.
A coherent heart pattern is indicative of a system that can recover and adapt to stressful situations very efficiently. Many times, we just need to be in the presence of horses to feel a sense of well-being and peace.
In fact, research shows that people experience many physiological benefits by interacting with horses, including lower blood pressure and heart rate, higher beta-endorphins (neurotransmitters acting as pain suppressors), decreased stress levels, decreased feelings of anger, hostility, tension and anxiety, better social working; and greater feelings of empowerment, confidence, patience and self-efficacy.

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