Haylage can certainly be, yes, and often is.
Chaff, conditioning mix and hay/haylage.
Well that would greatly depend on the level of work the pony was doing. If it was in strenuous work then feeding both Hard feeds and Haylage might be useful. However if the pony is in anything less that highly strenuous work Haylage would likely be able to supply enough nutrients and energy to keep the pony healthy.
It depends on the horse. Ask your vet to see what's right for your horse(s).
Yes, many people feed their sheep haylage. Silage can carry listeriosis so it is recommended that you feed only good quality haylage or hay. If using haylage it should be fed as fresh as possible, don't just crack open a round bale and leave it out for a month, it'll quite likely go bad and it's not good for your sheep if it gets moldy. The best thing to do is to find the best quality you can in bales of a good practical size for your needs, that's why so many people still use square bales, because they're easier to handle.
chaff...forage 'n' Fibre...limestone powder...garlic...pony nuts... HI FI...haylage...carots...apples...kiwi...hay...
NEVER feed mouldy hay to horses( or mouldy pellets, grains or chaff) Horses will usually tell you if the hay is mouldy(unless they are very hungry) but not wanting to eat it. Dont confuse mouldy hay with silage or haylage, but be verycareful feeding silage and haylage to horses.
Many things can be used to feed both horses and cattle, grass is first and foremost what they are designed to eat. Other food stuffs would be hay, corn, oats, barley, haylage, and processed feeds made by a manufacturer.
Forage (silage or haylage).
Haylage?
food and hay/haylage =)
contains the feed dogs & lines for straight sewing
tends to encourage excitability, hope I helped!