Brumbies eat grass and/or leaves. The Brumbies have adapted to harsher conditions than domesticated horses and are not as picky for what they eat.
i don't know much about horses, but for wild brumbys i think the would eat grass.
Brumbys are wild Australian horses. =]
ya mum
Brumbies are the wild horses of Australia, much like our mustangs.
I believe they were called australian brumbys but I am not possitive
Kunama, meaning snow. She is the daughter of Golden, the mare who escaped from stockmen.
they are called mustangs. they are the American wild horses. Australian wild horses are called brumbys.
They will change their habits. Wild Brumbys have adapted to less water, as there is not much. I hope this helps a bit! :)
Brumby are most commonly found in Australia. They are found in many areas within the country such as the Northern Territory, Queensland, and the Australian Alps.
only 3% of original mustangs are atill wild today
The brumby of Australia is the most wild horse because more mustang have been broken in than brumbys and have less purebred ancestors, domestic stock and saddle horses were as the mustangs ancestor were the andalusian, Arab (one of the purest breeds), the barb and the turk.
G'day mate theres a few I got in mind mate cane toads,foxes, rabbits, feral cats, feral dogs, goats, brumbys, them annoying europe birds that steal my fruit! Black/ brown rats .. Carp. Although I feel feral cats are the most devistating of animals
A horse can eat many grains, grasses, and oats. But a horse cannot eat anything that has high fructose corn syrup, it would kill a horse. And NO Anomaly. This is what i saw on National Geographic. Actually, horses can have things that have high fructose corn syrup. Just a very small amount. If they eat too much they can get a crusty neck (that's bad, it means the horse is WAY over weight) and will most likely founder (coffin bone in the hoof will rotate down, and if the horse's sole is too thin, come out of the bottom of the hoof. Founder is different than laminitis. Laminitis is when the hoof wall separates from the hoof capsule and the coffin bone does NOT roate.) Horse treats sometimes have high fructose corn syrup in them to hold the treat together. Molasass is a high fructose syrup, not corn, but sugar cane. If you are wondering what a horse can/cant eat then think about the brumbys(wild horses), what do they eat? Mainly grasses, weeds, salt, oats. Think Natural Substances!