Friday, September 30, 2016

Product Reveiw: NibbleNet Slow Feeder Hay Bag

It's been about a year since I purchased this hay bag, and it's seen near-constant use, so I thought I'd review it since I'm very pleased with it.

The product in question is the NibbleNet Slow Feeder Hay Bag. Mine is the 1.5" hole version, and it comes with smaller holes. It retails for $69.99, so this is not a cheap piece of equipment.

(not my photo)

I have previously experimented with slow feeder hay bags when Tristan was on stall rest from his surgery. I purchased the SmartPak Small Hole Hay Net in the hopes of slowing down his consumption. That didn't last long. It was time-consuming for the barn staff to load, and Tristan loathed it, to the degree that my food-crazy pony would often leave the last bit when it got really difficult to get the hay out. So it's been in storage ever since.

Two winters ago, the barn recommended purchasing the NibbleNets for use in all the stalls; that would help with maintaining more of a free choice hay environment in the stalls, which for us is especially important in the winter, given how cold it gets. I didn't have the funds at the time to purchase this particular brand, so I subbed in my old Classic Equine Top Load Hay Bag. I had two of them; I had purchased them after much deliberation as hay bags for my trailer. Joke's on me, they never worked in the trailer because of the way the manger area was set up, so I always used just a regular cotton hay net. That bag barely lasted the winter - it was a smart design and an attractive bag but it was just not durable at all. I stitched it back together several times but finally gave up on it.

Last January, I made my first purchase at Riding Warehouse during their 20% off sale, and this bag was on the top of my list. I paid $55.16 for it. How has it been since then?

Magic. Okay, that's a little bit of an exaggeration, but WOW, this sucker wears like iron and does exactly what it says on the tin: slows down a horse's rate of eating.


Much to the chagrin of shaggy little roan mustangs.

It does flip over sometimes, but it's easy enough even for the horses to flip back the right way, and for my money, that's extra entertainment value. And there are loops on the bottom and ways you can tie it down more securely if that sort of thing really bothers you.



Thinking I would write this post for today, last night I took a good long look at the hay bag to check for weaknesses, stress points, or wear marks. I found basically none, after 10 months of continual use by a horse who is not easy on his toys.

So despite the higher price tag, I can HIGHLY recommend this hay bag. It durability and usability are worth the cost.

8 comments:

  1. There is a local store near me that sells an Amish made version of these hay bags, I love them for stall and trailer!

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    1. I thought about buying an off-brand, but nowhere near here sells them and I'd seen the others do so well that I wanted to buy what I knew worked! If I could put hands on another one in person I might try it.

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  2. How much hay does it hold at once? I use the SmartPak small hole net because Bobby gets about half a bale all loaded at once for his evening hay, and it fills that bag out completely. It is, however, already starting to show some signs of abuse. I'd love something more durable, but I'd hate to have to ask barn workers to refill a net multiple times.

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    1. I played around a little bit last night and I can confidently say that it will hold 4 flakes. It could probably go up to 6 if you really stuffed them in there or if they were smaller. So, potentially half a bale depending on bale size. It won't all go in at once; you'd have to do two flakes and then two flakes as a stack within it. (It's not flexible in the same way that the nets are.)

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  3. Good to know! Would it work well in a trailer?

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    1. Maybe. Probably. It would depend on how your trailer is set up for hay bags. It would not have worked in my old trailer because it would have spun around too easily. It really wants to be against a wall or a pole to work best - so for a slant load or any kind of trailer where you can rig this to be up against something, I bet it would be great. It would not be big enough to share between two horses, though.

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  4. Replies
    1. I wish my Classic Equine one had held up, I thought that was really a brilliant design - but it just got destroyed.

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