The number of horses allowed per acre is usually controlled by the county where the property is located.
One horse per acre is standard.
2 horses are allowed in California. As a stipulation, the owner must meet the criteria of having the 1/2 acre next to a 3/4 acre lot, near a trail or rural St.
New Jersey allows 1 acre per horse at the least. Ultimately it is dependent upon the size of the horse(s).
Zoning is different for counties as well as cities, and covenants in subdivision may restrict numbers even further. For example: In my county you can have 4 horses per acre, in a neighboring county they allow only 2 horses, per acre. A subdivision in either county may only permit one horse per lot, even though the lot is 5 acres. Some subdivisions have more than one filing where one filing allows livestock and the other does not so seeing horses in a neighborhood is not a guarantee that all lots/houses can have horses. If you are part of a subdivision with convenants there will be documentation on the restrictions in your neighborhood.
The number of horses allowed per acre is usually controlled by the county where the property is located.
One horse per acre is standard.
2
2 horses are allowed in California. As a stipulation, the owner must meet the criteria of having the 1/2 acre next to a 3/4 acre lot, near a trail or rural St.
New Jersey allows 1 acre per horse at the least. Ultimately it is dependent upon the size of the horse(s).
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.
There are four roods per acre.
How many kilograms of what?
There are around 40 guntas per acre, or 40 guntas in one acre.
It all depends on how many horses you have. You need one acre per horse for forage. So, say you have 6 horses, you need 6 acres.
42 people per acre
Four roods per acre.