You mean how to make loose-salt into a salt block. The fact is that it is cheaper to buy the pre-made blocks. The homemade recipes for salt blocks call for things such as bone meal which is not good for horses and many other types of livestock.
Yes, chemically they are sodium chloride (NaCl).
What is the prose's to extract salt from salt lick?
Nowhere because no such salt or mineral block exists.
Yes, but the salt block is better for them because it is much like how the horse would get salt in the wild and it helps with boredom too.
To give your horses a salt block you have to find one in the box then click on Salt Block.
A city block in Salt Lake City, Utah is ten square acres.
None. No such salt block, medicated block nor loose mineral mix exists.
Salt licks are a block made of salt usually used for horses and livestock.
No. All mineral blocks have enough salt in them to sustain cattle alone without having to have an additional salt block set out. Because mineral blocks are called "trace mineral" blocks, this means that 95 to 98% of the block is comprised of salt, while the other 5 to 2%, respectively, is composed of mineral.
Yes.
Yes, goats should have supplemental minerals in some form. You can use a salt block, but a mineral block is better. Some goats prefer loose minerals.
I would think so.