i do 1 to 2 flacks a day, one in the morning and the evening that way it can digest. if your horse is already over weight and gets pregnant don't feed her any. and if your horse is a mini don't feed her any.
As much as it wants to eat, without overfeeding it. Probably the same amount it was eating before it got pregnant, which is what humans are meant to do.
If a horse has lots of green pasture very much hay is not necessary. If they do not then one beet of hay once a day is plenty.
gorillas are very similar to humans so you should feed them pretty much the same thing you feed pregnant humans e.g vegetables fruit meat fish and lots of vitamins yes thanks for telling me ahahahaha
The gestating mare should eat about 2% of her body weight in food. The total feed per day should be 70% hay and 30% grain (concentrates). She should be fed alfalfa due to its high protein/nutrient content for the growing baby. However, grass hay such as timothy is fine as well, it just doesn't have as much protein and nutrients. Free choice water is a must and add a good vitamin mineral supplement to pregnant mare's grain.
There is no standard answer because the density of the pellets vary too much. Take a quart of your feed and weigh it on a kitchen scale to get an accurate weight.
Feeding hay by the flake is a very flawed method and usually results in the horse getting too much or too little forage. You should always feed a horse based on weight. A horse needs 1 to 3% of it's body-weight in food daily, hay should make up from 100% to at the very least 60% of the diet.
Horses have very delicate stomachs. They shouldn't be fed too much, probably twice a day, once in the morning and once in the evening. You should ask your vet what kind of feed your horse needs. If they're kind of old, you'll need to find something soft like bran mash. If your horse is young, energetic, and hard working, you should probably feed them a little more than just a horse being kept as a pet.
You should feed your horse 12 to 15 pounds.
What you reg. feed her until the foal is born then up her feed and give her a good mare and foal feed.
how big is the animal??
you should probably be feeding your horse grain instead of liquids
you should feed them a healthy diet of nubs, fubs, and gubbers.
When a horse is under weight you should feed him the full amount of forage/fodder that is Possible then age them with an aging point and feed them the full amount! happy howrsing!
Feeding a horse beet pulp can vary from horse to horse. Depending on if you have others in with them or how much you horse takes in daily. For me its usually 1 and a half scoops but again it varies. That is a question for your local feed store or your local vet.
Well first off prices will vary according to the type of hay and oats feed, your location, time of year and what that years feed crops produced or didn't produce. A horse should be fed at 1% to 3% of it's bodyweight in feed daily. A horse should only receive supplemental feeds like grain or pellets if it is in moderate or heavier work, pregnant, growing , or a hardkeeper. Also oats make a horse a bit 'temperamental' due to excess energy and it would be better for the horse to feed it a pelleted feed with structured nutrients.
It all depends on the amount of work your horse does through out the day. For a large horse you should give 18 ounces for every hour of work.
3 flakes
gorillas are very similar to humans so you should feed them pretty much the same thing you feed pregnant humans e.g vegetables fruit meat fish and lots of vitamins yes thanks for telling me ahahahaha
Supplements should be fed with the horse's grain. How often the supplement should be mixed with a horse's food depends on the supplement, and the horse. Read the label on the supplement carefully, and talk to your vet to figure out how often you should feed the supplement to your horse, and how much.