Barley is a cereal grain that is important in livestock nutrition. It is also used in regional dishes and as fermenting material for beer. Yellow corn is another cereal grain, but it is generally referred to as sweet corn and used in human cooking; whereas, seed corn, which is also yellow, is used as livestock feed.
Corn, barley, oats, etc., same grain fed to cattle.
A Brown Swiss is a milk cow. Therefore it gets the same type of feed that any productive, high-maintenance dairy cow needs: A TMR (Total Mixed Ration) of hay (alfalfa, timothy, clover, orchardgrass, etc.), silage (corn, barley, wheat) and grain (barley, wheat, corn, soybeans, etc.). See the related question below.
No. Corn is a grass, not a legume. It has the same properties of grass like the grass that grows in your lawn and the crops sown that are grasses themselves, such as oats, barley, wheat and rice.
Physiologically, there is very little difference, since they are actually the same species. In general, though, sweet corn tends to have shorter and smaller-diameter stalks than feed corn. Sweet corn tassels are usually light yellow compared to feed corn's red or reddish-green tassels. However, neither of these is 100% accurate. The only way to tell the difference for sure is to know what was planted, use a DNA test, or just wait till the corn matures.
Barley is a grain grown throughout the world it is used in human food and animal feed. Barley can be substituted with Arborio rice, buckwheat groats, and scotch barley.
yes, deer corn is just dried out regular yellow corn. most deer corn comes from ears of corn that will not sell, like if it is deformed or possibly picked prematurely.
On the surface it seems that these two different animals eat the same things. And in a way they do. But cattle need a higher level of protein, especially to make milk for dairy farming. If you feed alfalfa cattle get the first and second cutting of hay. Horses do much better on second and subsequent cuttings. If you feed your horse any grain or all-in-one, make sure it's not too rich for him.
Corn, Soybean, hay, sod, grain (wheat, maybe barley?)
Indian corn is Zea mays, and for this reason, most of the world calls it "maize." "Corn" which is from the same root (word) as "cereal," can refer to other edible seeds of the grass family, such as wheat, oats, barley, rye and even rice.
"Cow Corn" or animal feed is simply corn that is harvested later than sweet corn. "Cow Corn" is then dried and used for animal feed, or used in ethanol. Field corn is a far less sweet for of corn and is not the same as sweet corn. It has more carbohydrates and is grown differently. Most corn will grow only one ear per stalk. Newer hybrids of field corn can grow two or three ears per stalk. It has a far drier taste then sweet corn.
It is possible for one snake to continue swallowing - taking the other snake in with the mouse. The solution is to never feed two snakes in the same enclosure at the same time !
They eat the same things as other ducks. If ducklings, feed duck starter (local feed store). If not feed cracked corn (local feed store). They also eat tomatoes, corn, green beans, limabeans, various bugs, small feeder fish, turkey, cooked carrots, mashed hard boiled eggs, and milk.