It can so long as the grass is of good quality and there is at least one acre per horse , 2 acres are better.
as long as the horse lives, which is forever for an immortal horse
One horse per acre is standard.
You can own a horse just about anywhere so long as the local laws says it's OK to do so. You'll most likely need a bare minimum of 1 acre per horse by law.
You need to have about an acre per horse. So is you have one horse, one acre. If you have two horses, two acres. Etc. Etc.
Typically a single acre is not considered enough to support even one horse. This is due to the amount or lack of grazing available, possible mud due to lack of space to rest the grass when it is wet, and how hard it can be to maintain a single acre if you have nowhere to put the horse. The average is at least one acre per horse, with two being better. The only way to make one acre work is to have one horse and make sure the horse is not turned out on the grass all day and night.
1 acre.
New Jersey allows 1 acre per horse at the least. Ultimately it is dependent upon the size of the horse(s).
An acre of land is a unit of measurement used to quantify land area. It is equal to 43,560 square feet or approximately 4,840 square yards. It is commonly used in real estate and agriculture to denote the size of a plot of land.
No, the word "acre" is typically pronounced with a short "a" sound, like "ak-er."
Long Acre road is located in London, England. Other locations have the name Long Acre, including the Long Acre theater in New York, and Longacre Square, now Times Square, located also in New York.
It is good to have at least 2 or 3 acres for one horse. I used to have three horses, and we had them in a 6-acre pasture. They mowed down the grass very fast, and we sold one of them because we didnt have enough room.