I have never heard of 'Cow' Vetch, but i have heard of Crown Vetch and it is toxic to horses. It is best to remove the plant from your property, and feeding alfalfa can help to 'cure' the poisoning. However there is another type of Vetch that is perfectly fine to feed to horses, but is a legume like alfalfa hay and should be fed sparingly.
no not at all
cow is producer
Cow's eat grass so it usually comes out green. However, it also depends on what the cow eat's. But cow's can't eat that much, just pretty much hay and grass just like horses have to eat hay and grass.
Several animals eat jaggery. It can be given raw as a treat or used to sweeten feed. A couple animals that eat it are cows and horses.
NO! we eat sheep, horses, and cow. that's all. but we can have deer hide but only if we have a special ceremony.
I have heard that it is dangerous for horses to eat crab apples because they are poisonous to them. This is the same as acorns which can kill them if they eat too many because they can not digest them.
Yes, people do eat horses. In the United states it is considered illegal to slaughter horses for human consumption, but in many countries horse meat is considered no different than cow meat.
Horses can eat skittles but only as a treat, small amounts and hardly at all, and if youhappened to read the answer before HORSES CANNOT EAT EVERYTHING! Milk, eggs ,acorns ,privet, bracken, foxglove, ragwort, nightshade, oak leaves, yew, horsetail, Laburnum and Patterson's curse are all dangerous to horses, if your horse or pony eats any of these call your veterinarian. Those by the way are only a few foods dangerous to horses.
Producers make their own food. They are mostly plants. Those animals that eat them are herbivores: cow, horses, rabbits, and humans.
No.
There's no such thing as an "organic cow." A cow is a cow, regardless. She will eat what "normal" cows eat, which is defined in the related question posted below.
Man nor beast (cows, oxen, horses, etc.) can digest metals. It can lead to blockage in the intestines, or to metal poisoning. Metals as they corrode can literally eat through the lining of the digestive tract, where ever the metal lodges in the body. A hole in the intestines leads to peritonitis-- an infection in the abdominal cavity---which can then lead to death.