They use their molars to chew their food,but they can't chew if their teeth are pointy.If a horse has pointy teeth float their teeth.How to float them is you use power tools to grind the teeth down.
They put their head down and bite the grass, chew, swallow, repeat. it's like what you do when you take your face to the plate instead of using your fork properly.
Anywhere there is food
Horses get their food in the same way, no matter their color or breed. Wild horses graze and domestic horses graze and wait at the feed trough. Color is irrelevant to horses and their stomachs.
In the wild horses will graze up to 20 hours a day.
Yes, donkeys often graze with horses.
Horses eat grass, they graze.
Anywhere there is food
The poem Horses Graze is making the point that when horses graze, they aren't thinking about or worrying about what anyone else is doing. They just mind their own business and enjoy the grazing. This is part of their secret of remaining happy.
Yes.
Yes, although it always depends on the temper, and such, of the animals. So not all llamas will graze with horses and vice versa.
Basically how any other wild animal lives. There is the risk of being captured by humans or being hunted as prey by carnivores, but wild horses have survived in the wild for thousands of years. They graze on grasses and they grow thick coats during the winter so they don't freeze. Horses are tough animals, and if they weren't, there would be any more.
Horses graze. To "hunt" food actually means to find their prey, stalk/chase and kill it. Horses don't "hunt."
I heard there were. The story: After the horse market fell and the value of horses went down, locals released theirs on old mining land so they could graze their. The population has increased since then and they are now wild horses, though the locals continue to claim ownership of them.
Sheep