Orchard hay is usually just a grass hay, so it may be your local hay. There are similar types of grass hay, (timothy, rye) and sometimes you can find them mixed with other types of hay. This kind of hay is good but for most horses they may need alfalfa or oat hay in addition to orchard. 'Easy keepers' do well with orchard hay because they maintain their body weight more easily.
hay and grain Horses eat a varity of things. Grass, hay, grain etc
Different types of grasses, hay and grains
I believe their are more than three types of hay. Alfalfa, oat, and your grass hay. Tifton, bermuda, bahia and a wide variety of others.
Horses eat hay or haylage haylege is a sweeter type of hay wich has a higher suger content! xxx They also eat grass, apples and different types of grain.
That all depends on the horse really, there are man different types of hay that horses can eat. Some horses have allergies to some types of hay and some horses can eat any type of hay. If you are talking about actual grass instead of hay, then you cannot graze horses purely on most grasses because it does not contain enough nutrients to keep a horse healthy.
Grass (and hay) and grains of various types (oats, etc)
A horse eats grass or hay and no animals.
Hay, grass, grain and/or silage.
It is typical to get Hayfever during the spring or summer months. It is an allergic reaction that the body undergoes when the pollen from growing things enters the body. The bodies immune system reacts to the presence of pollen as if it were an infection; that is why a person experiences cold like symptoms during an allergy attack.
It is. Horses usually love timothy hay and it's a great general hay, mixing well with other types like alfalfa #2 or a good red or green oat. Not available in some areas but if you have it in yours, your lucky.
well you can different types of hay bundles and i will tell you them! :) the big round cylinder shape ones are called round bale. the small rectangle ones are called a biscut of hay. the big rectangle ones are called a large bale of hay. AND THAT IS IT!