No. It is normal for a horse to ingest up to 28 walnuts.
No, Crazy Horse is not single.
Yes, horses should not eat the shells of acorns.
On average, a single walnut weighs around 5 grams. Therefore, half a walnut would weigh approximately 2.5 grams.
Black walnut is especially toxic to horses and should never be brought onto the same property where horses are kept. It does not really matter what form the wood is in it stays toxic to the horses and can bring on allergic reaction and severe laminitis.
Walnut wood is the hard, heavy wood from the walnut tree. The heartwood is very dark brown, and it gets darker if its kiln-drying cycle alternates between drying and steaming. Some woodworkers like to save their shavings and sawdust for horse owners, to make horse bedding. Please don't do this if you work walnut; walnut is poisonous to horses.
No, walnuts are bad for horses and can kill them if the horses eat them.
there is a chance that the gorilla can kill a horse when the gorilla hug the horse tight then the horse cant breath no because the horse will kick the gorilla and then the horse will run
There are a couple ways this could be possible. Obviously, a horse could easily kill small or younger cubs by stomping them to death. A horse's best chance at killing an adult lion would be if it managed to land a well aimed kick to the head. The head tends to be a sensitive body part to big cats, as giraffes often always kill lions with a single kick to this area..
Cut it down. Some species are not self-pollinating, but the "English" walnut is, so there's no reasonable way to keep it from producing fruits.
If it does, I would report it as a hate crime.
Naturally, it would depend on the horse.
No, or Maybe. I shore a strong horse actually can