Potassium (K) is a primary intracellular electrolyte responsible for fluid regulation, muscle contraction, nerve transmission, and acid-base balance. This Potassium (K) Refill Pack is designed specifically for use in a Free-Choice Mineral Buffet / Free-Choice Mineral Bar system so animals can self-select potassium intake based on forage conditions, workload, climate, and metabolic demand.
Sweet Medicine Farm offers Potassium as part of a Free-Choice Mineral Buffet / Free-Choice Mineral Bar, so animals can self-select based on real-time needs instead of a one-size-fits-all approach.
Why Potassium Matters in a Free-Choice Mineral Buffet
Potassium plays a central role in cellular hydration and electrical signaling. It works in constant coordination with sodium and chloride to regulate:
• Fluid balance inside cells
• Muscle contraction and relaxation
• Nerve impulse transmission
• Acid-base equilibrium
• Cardiovascular stability
In pasture-based herd mineral programs, potassium levels are often high in rapidly growing spring pasture. Lush forage can contain elevated potassium, particularly in heavily fertilized fields. While potassium deficiency is less common in fresh pasture systems, imbalance relative to sodium and magnesium can create metabolic stress.
Potassium demand may increase during:
• Heavy sweating in performance horses
• Heat stress
• Lactation
• Diarrhea or digestive disturbance
• High grain feeding programs
Electrolyte balance is dynamic. Excess potassium relative to sodium can interfere with magnesium absorption and may contribute to muscle tightness or reduced metabolic efficiency.
Regional Trends & Mineral Interactions
Potassium dynamics are strongly influenced by soil fertility and fertilization practices.
• High nitrogen fertilization often increases plant potassium levels
• Lush spring pasture can elevate potassium intake
• Stored hay may retain elevated potassium depending on harvest timing
• High potassium forage can reduce magnesium uptake
Common interactions:
• Potassium works in balance with sodium in fluid regulation
• Elevated potassium can interfere with magnesium metabolism
• Potassium shifts influence overall electrolyte balance
In early spring, high-potassium pasture combined with low magnesium availability can contribute to metabolic challenges in ruminants. A self-selection mineral program allows animals to adjust intake patterns across the mineral spectrum to maintain balance.
What Potassium Imbalance May Look Like
True potassium deficiency is uncommon in forage-based systems, but imbalance may present as:
• Muscle tightness or cramping
• Reduced performance
• Electrolyte instability
• Decreased feed efficiency
• Altered hydration patterns
Because potassium interacts with sodium and magnesium, symptoms often reflect broader electrolyte imbalance rather than isolated deficiency.
Observation across seasons, especially during rapid pasture growth, is important.
Why the Free-Choice Mineral Buffet Approach Is Different
Potassium demand varies by climate, forage growth stage, workload, and electrolyte loss. Fixed premixes assume uniform intake across a herd, regardless of seasonal shifts.
This product is designed exclusively for Buffet-only use within a Free-Choice Mineral Buffet / Mineral Bar system.
It:
• Supports self-selection minerals across horses, goats, cattle, bison, deer, elk, and sheep
• Allows animals to balance electrolyte demand seasonally
• Avoids forced, uniform supplementation
• Integrates into a broader herd mineral program
• Fits regenerative livestock systems where forage variability is expected
Important: This is for Buffet use only. Do not top-dress or mix into feed or water.
How to Use
Placement & Setup
• Offer in a clean, dry compartment within your Free-Choice Mineral Buffet
• Keep protected from moisture, manure splash, and contamination
• Place in a calm, low-traffic area where all animals can access comfortably
• Provide adequate space to prevent dominant animals from blocking timid herd members
Mineral access is behavioral ecology. Potassium intake should reflect biological demand rather than herd hierarchy.
Maintenance & Storage
• Refill regularly and maintain at least half-full compartments
• Refresh and stir if clumping occurs
• Maintain clean compartments to prevent cross-contamination
• Store refills in a cool, dry location away from direct sunlight
• Ensure fresh, clean water is always available
Transition Guidance
When first introducing a Free-Choice Mineral Buffet system, intake patterns may fluctuate as animals rebalance electrolyte status. Intake typically stabilizes within 2–6 weeks depending on forage potassium levels, workload, and climate conditions.
Animals should have continuous, unrestricted access to the Free-Choice Mineral Buffet at all times so they can adjust intake based on biological demand, forage shifts, reproductive stage, and environmental stress.
Guaranteed Analysis & Ingredients
Rice Hull Carrier
Guaranteed Analysis (per lb):
Potassium – 41% (Min)
Ingredients:
Potassium Chloride, Rice Hulls
Salt Carrier
Guaranteed Analysis (per lb):
Potassium – 41% (Min)
Salt – 9.5–10.5% (Min-Max)
Ingredients:
Potassium Chloride, Salt
Packaging Options
• Resealable Bags: 0.5 lb, 1 lb, 2 lb, 5 lb, 10 lb, 15 lb
• Bulk Boxes: 25 lb
Why Sweet Medicine Farm
Sweet Medicine Farm builds minerals around animal agency and practical herd management:
• Designed specifically for the Free-Choice Mineral Buffet / Mineral Bar system
• Clear labeling for simple, consistent refills
• Built to match real pasture variability
• Supports regenerative livestock and soil-conscious producers
This is not a premix strategy. It is a mineral framework built for dynamic pasture systems and biologically responsive livestock.