Salt Lick Tub

A salt lick in a flexible tub for all horses & ponies, providing sodium & a top up of magnesium.

  • Use in the field or stable
  • Reuseable flexitub

Suitable For

  • All horses and ponies
  • Laminitics
  • Use in hot weather
  • Horses in hard work
  • Horses that sweat freely
£19.95

Composition

Sodium Chloride, Magnesium Chloride, Anhydrous Magnesia

We are very keen to promote natural feeding of our native Highlands as they are not built to cope with rich higher sugar diets that you see in many other feeds. We also needed a straightforward and economical diet that could be used for our mares, stallions, foals and youngstock that would promote muscle development and bone growth without adding excess fat or fizz. With Simple System we have found exactly that.

Carolyn Ashcroft, Cheshire

Perfect Partners to Salt Lick Tub

Please select one of the categories below for appropriate companions to Salt Lick Tub

Perfect Partners to Salt Lick Tub

Premium 6mm high fibre grass pellets, providing all the benefits of summer grass, all year round.

£17.25

Premium 12mm lucerne nuts, naturally high in calcium & protein to support muscles & bones.

£17.25

Unmolassed beetpulp pellets - a source of high quality digestible fibre, with no added sugar.

£15.00

A blend of top quality ingredients for our ultimate forage balancer. Feed all year round to complement forages & grazing.

£29.95
£67.50

Related Articles

How can I best manage my young horse to ensure they have the healthiest joints?

Early feeding and management can have long lasting impact on the health, soundness and longevity of our horses. Choosing high quality forages ensures they reach their full potential, without risking damage to their immature joints.

Feeding new hay

When old hay is running low, or is not very good quality, we will want to start on the new hay as soon as possible. But when can we start using new hay?

My horse is prone to tying up and I have been told to give them a high oil diet. What else can I do to support them?

When horses are prone to tying up, it is important to keep their metabolism off the anaerobic, glucose pathway as this results in the formation of lactic acid, too much of which will trigger a tying up episode.