answersLogoWhite

0

What do zorse eat?

User Avatar

Anonymous

14y ago
Updated: 8/16/2019

Zorses are cross between zebra and horse, so you can give it anything horse and zebra would eat. Zebras eat only grass (as far as i know), but oats and stuff horses eat will be good for it, so zorses gonna eat anything horsey.

User Avatar

Wiki User

16y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

How does a zorse eat?

Any equine will eat about 2.5% of it's own body weight in forage daily.


What is parentage of a zorse?

A zorse is a zebra and a horse.


Who is the mother of a zorse?

A zorse is a mother zebra crossed with a domestic male horse


What is the purpose of mixing a horse and zebra to get a zorse?

People usually do this just to have a zorse because the idea of a zorse is cool. Some people so ride them.


What is the diet of a zorse?

Any equine will eat about 2.5% of it's own body weight in forage daily.


Does a zorse have a tail?

Yes.


This isn't fully a horse but an equine of course. It's crossed with a Zebra making it a?

Zorse -- SqueakyBeeps HI2 :)


How much does a zorse cost?

You can't get a zorse because it is forbidden to breed them. That's because non-wild zebras can be held only in zoos with premission and breed only each other. However, if you really want a zorse, you have some filthy work to do on your own risk and hide zorse all its life. P.S Give up~


Are zorse stronger smarter and faster then other horses?

A zorse or zebrula is the offspring of a zebra stallion and a horse mare. A zorse is smarter and faster than a horse. It is easily trained and almost immune to hot weather.


Where does a zorse live?

A zorse or zebroid, specifically the offspring of a zebra stallion and a horse mare. The rarer reverse pairing is sometimes called a horbra (or hebra). Like most other hybrids, the zorse is sterile.http://www.answers.com/topic/zorse#cite_note-0The zorse is a strong animal with traces from both its parents.


How was the zorse produced?

sexual reprodaction


What are names of crossbred horses?

Zorse!