depends on their weight ...if he is lacking a bit of weight feed him a bit of rice bran.... lucern hay is great because it has sugar....fi your horse does preforming thne consault your local stock feed barn...
depends on their weight ...if he is lacking a bit of weight feed him a bit of rice bran.... lucern hay is great because it has sugar....fi your horse does preforming thne consault your local stock feed barn...
Diomedes
horses don't have to be "trained" to eat anything. usually they'll eat hay, grain, grass and oats. some horses will taste other things including people food, most of them will just spit it back out.
it depends. horses that have been trained to will, but if the horses hasn't been trained to, it wont.
"Wild horses run free. Domesticated horses are tamer. Those are the only differences." those aren't the only differences. Domesticated horses eat very differently to wild horses, for example wild horses wouldn't eat chaff and pony nuts, wild horses would eat grass and berries. they also live very differently to one another... there are a few differences really
Yes horses are smart and very trainable animals. If they were not relatively easy to train humans would not have domesticated them and used them for millennia.
Horses can eat meat and have been trained to eat meat in high altitude and extremely cold environments. As a matter of fact Shackleton took horses with him to Antarctica.
yes
Rhoda Royal's Trained Horses - 1912 was released on: USA: 9 March 1912
with already trained horses=nothing or it could immediately start walking. with horses not trained=buck, run away, or rear
all horses can eat hay/grass. all horses can eat hay/grass.
Horses may eat their afterbirth.
yes horses do eat cantaloupe