Belly Down
Adds flank depth and body fill that stays in the system longer than beet pulp, without adding body weight
Always read and follow product labels for feeding and sheep safety.
Overview
Belly Down is specifically marketed as a fill supplement that outlasts beet pulp in the digestive system — a claim that positions it directly against the commodity standard for show fill. The manufacturer states it adds flank fullness without adding body weight, making it useful in the final weeks when feeders want to manage fill without adding fat or condition. Priced at $29.95.
Manufacturer Specifications
Guaranteed Analysis
| Nutrient | % |
|---|---|
| Crude Protein (min) | |
| Crude Fat (min) | |
| Crude Fiber (max) | |
| Moisture (max) |
Note: Guaranteed analysis not available from product page.
Key Ingredients / Active Components
- Specific ingredients not disclosed
- Positioned as a fiber-based fill product with longer gut retention than beet pulp
Official Feeding Rate
- Rate: Not specified in available sources
- Introduction: Not specified
- Species notes: Show livestock (sheep implied)
Show Circuit Use
Sources: essentialshowfeeds.com/lamb-products
How Experienced Feeders Actually Use It
The “longer retention than beet pulp” claim is the key differentiator. Experienced feeders use beet pulp strategically to add flank fill and satiety, but it passes through relatively quickly. Belly Down is positioned to hold that fill longer, which is particularly useful in the 24–48 hours before showing when feeders are managing gut fill carefully.
Real-World Feeding Rate
- Typical rate: Not found in available sources
- Introduction timeline: Final prep and show week based on positioning
Common Deviations from Label
No data found.
Breed-Specific Notes
No breed-specific notes found. Flank depth is a visible judging criterion in all market lamb classes.
Phase Protocols
Weeks 5–3 | Fill & Shaping Phase
Introduce to establish flank fill and body depth as the animal is being dialed in.
Weeks 2–1 | Final Prep Phase
Primary use window. Maintain fill without adding condition that could over-cover the animal.
Show Week (Days 5–1)
Continue. The “longer retention” advantage is most valuable here — manages fill through the show without requiring constant re-feeding.
Stacking Protocols
With FLARE: FLARE opens rib shape; Belly Down adds flank depth below it. Together they address both the upper and lower body fill dimensions. As beet pulp replacement: For feeders already using commodity beet pulp in the program, Belly Down can replace or supplement it with the claimed retention advantage.
Budget Alternatives
Soaked shredded beet pulp is the direct commodity comparison — significantly cheaper per lb, widely available, but with reportedly shorter gut retention. Soybean hulls serve a similar fiber-fill role.
Community Tips
Reserved for verified community submissions — do not populate during initial documentation.
Pairs Well With
- FLARE
- Foundation
- Voltage
Direct Substitutes
Products that do the same job at the same point in the program — compare alternatives across brands in the directory.
| Product | Brand | Form | Budget | Feeding Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fill 'Er Up® | Kalmbach Feeds (Formula of Champions) | Pellet | Budget | 0.5 lbs/head/day (sheep) – 1 lb/head/day (sheep) |
| High Octane Depth Charge | Purina Animal Nutrition | Pellet | Mid-Range | 4 oz/day – 8 oz/day |
| MoorMan's® ShowTec® RumaFill™ | MoorMan's ShowTec | Pellet | Budget | 0.5 lbs/head/day – 2 lbs/head/day |
| ShowBoss Lowdown | Kent Feeds | Loose Grain | Budget | 1 lb/head/day – 3 lbs/head/day |
| High Octane Ultra Full | Purina Animal Nutrition | Pellet | Mid-Range | 4 oz/day – 16 oz/day |
Sources
- https://www.essentialshowfeeds.com/lamb-products (manufacturer)