well it depends on what you can hanndle, you need to take in to concideration how many you can feed, how much room you have, if you can pay for vet things, and such. you should also so think about your experance, if you have never had horses, i would start with one, as they are a big responsibility. if you have some experiance, then you might want between, 2-5, or if you know a lot about horses and have them and have had them for a while, then i dont think you would be asking this question. also some people say about one horse per aker.
lol, well it kinda depends on the horse breed and the gass type, but usually it's 2 horses to an acre, unless you have some breed of draft horse, drafts might need 1 each and, smaller ponies are about 3 to an acre. :) i have a halflinger and a shetland and we have 3 acres and we do just fine. lol :)
There is no definitive answer to the question "How many horses can you put in a pasture". There are many considerations to the answer including: What kind of pasture, and the quality of the forage there, and the horse's size and its nutritional and exercise requirements.
It depends on how much acreage you have; you should have at least 1 acre per horse to forage in.
As of 2010, there is no maximum, it is unlimited.
I've seen some who own well over 5000 howrses.
2 horses because each horse needs one acre
You should fed it first (of course).
First go into my equestrian center and click on meadows. If you want to put the meadow in pasture for the resident horsesthen click on the meadow and click Put in pasture for the resident horses. Nothing to it!
You can give your horse an apple, turnip, carrot, or put it in the pasture.
it depends on how many horses you have
Yes (its a question from howrse)
Fence off areas of the pasture with temporary electric fencing that the horses should be grazing on. Allowing only a portion of the pasture for the horses to graze will allow for less risk of the horses overgrazing the pasture, which they tend to do.
No, walnuts are bad for horses and can kill them if the horses eat them.
it means that the pasture will not be used by the horses. a pasture has to be fallow to grow crops on also
Depends on how big the pasture is, how many horses. If there are more horses than year round forage, I'd suggest hay. It also depends on what grows in your pasture? Any alfalfa or timothy? Those are really good for the horse(s).
No no no no no no no
pasture
The phrase 'horses at pasture' simply means that they are out in a grassy area (such as a paddock) eating grass or feeding. Sometimes it may also mean a horse is retired in a paddock. :)