Parallax Equestrian

Parallax Equestrian Elevate your equine experience with Parallax Plastics horse feeders. Manufactured in the UK.

Parallax Plastics LTD are the UK manufacturers of a range of equestrian hay feeders. These all have a specific criteria that enables horses live healthily and happily. Each hay feeder is easy to use for the owners and allows horses to eat at a natural level with their heads down.

One feeder. Your choice of grill insert.The Hay-Saver is built to last — and designed to work the way you need it to. Wh...
07/06/2026

One feeder. Your choice of grill insert.

The Hay-Saver is built to last — and designed to work the way you need it to. Whether you’re managing a greedy good-doer or a horse that needs a little encouragement to slow down, the interchangeable grill inserts let you tailor the feed rate without changing the feeder.

British-made, yard-tested, and built to handle whatever your horse throws at it. Literally.

Which grill are you using? Drop it below 👇

04/06/2026

The satisfying mud removal you didn’t know you needed 🤎

We slowed it down so you could enjoy every second — one brush, zero fuss. The Nimbrush cuts through dried mud like it was never there. No soaking, no scrubbing, no drama.

03/06/2026

Fill it, lock it, walk away. 🐴 The Hay-Saver holds up to 20kg of forage — hay, haylage or soaked hay — and those carefully sized feeding spaces do the rest, slowing your horse’s intake naturally so it lasts the way it should. Less mess on the floor, less waste, and a horse that’s calm, occupied and feeding the way nature intended. Find your nearest stockist at horsehayfeeder.co.uk — link in bio.

01/06/2026

Did you know?Our weighted, non-tip design means it stays exactly where you put it — no more feed scattered across the floor, no more frustrated horses nudging it into the corner. Slower feeding, less waste, more stability. Just the way it should be. 🐴

Not the usual place to spot a Hay Play but proof enrichment is needed for all animals and marine life!! Spotted at  what...
30/05/2026

Not the usual place to spot a Hay Play but proof enrichment is needed for all animals and marine life!! Spotted at what enclosure do you think this is was in? Pop us your guesses below 👇

29/05/2026

If I could erase one thing from horse ownership… It wouldn’t be the early starts or the mud or the endless headcollars that somehow go missing. It would be this. 🌿☠️

Ragwort. The villain of every summer. Toxic to horses, impossible to ignore, and absolutely nobody’s idea of a good time. Gloves on, bag open, back ruined — off we go.

If you own land with horses, you already know. And if you’re new to this world… welcome. This is part of the deal.

Whats your most-hated yard job? Let us know in the comments 👇 misery loves company.

26/05/2026

When the temperature spikes, this is the first thing we do. ☀️🐴
Cold water, big muscle groups, keep it moving. No hesitation — and yes, cold is fine. The old advice about it causing cramp? Unpicked by science a long time ago.
There’s a lot more to heatwave care than hosing down though — we’ve just published a full blog post on everything we do when temperatures climb: water points, electrolytes, timing your turnout and why a damp coat is actually the perfect moment to groom properly.
Link in bio to read it in full. Drop a comment if you’ve got your own hot-weather routine we should know about 👇

25/05/2026

Cold hosing is one of the most effective tools you have in a heatwave and it’s something a lot of people are still slightly hesitant about. To be clear: cold water is fine. Contrary to older advice, there is no good evidence that applying cold water to large muscle groups causes tying-up or cramping in a hot horse. The concern was based on a misunderstanding of equine physiology that has since been well and truly unpicked.
Hose cold water over the large muscle groups — quarters, back, neck — and keep moving the water rather than letting it sit. The water itself carries heat away from the body, No need to scrape leave them wet. You’ll see the horse relax almost immediately.

23/05/2026

When it’s this hot, your horse is losing more than just sweat.
Electrolytes lost through sweating need replacing — and a recovery mash is one of the best ways to do it. Wet feed, electrolyte powder stirred through, and a horse that’s earned a proper rest. We’ve been using recovery mash great for getting those all important salts back into their system.
Signs your horse may need electrolytes: heavy sweating, lethargy, reduced drinking, or dull eyes. Don’t wait until they’re struggling.

22/05/2026

Hot horse + cold hose = instant relief. You can see it in their eyes the moment the water hits.
After a proper cold rinse — back, quarters, legs, between the hind legs where the heat really sits — we take the time to groom properly whilst the coat is damp. It’s honestly the best time to do it. Everything comes away easily, the coat dries gleaming and your horse gets a good once-over at the same time.
Two jobs, one session. And a very happy, very clean horse at the end of it.

Address

Glebe Farm, Peck Lane
Nottingham
NG147EX

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+441159663836

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Parallax Equestrian posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Parallax Equestrian:

Share