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cows and horses
two horses
It all depends on the quality of the grazing. Normally you allow one acre of land per horse but on poor quality grazing I would say one horse per two acres. Poor grazing is better than good grazing for ponies, donkeys and mules. You might be able to get 75 or 80 horses on 72 acres but if the grazing were poor, a more realistic figure would be 40.
The Sahel and savannah can support herds of animals for grazing.
Horses are grazing animals and need adequate grasses to feed on. They also need plenty of room to roam in order to stay physically fit and keep their hooves hard and strong. In the wild, horses will roam about 20 miles per day while grazing. Of course, you don't need 20 miles of land in order to keep a horse. Many people successfully keep one or two horses on an acre of land but the rule of thumb is the more land, the better.
plain and plateaus.
When someone puts two and two together, they draw an obvious conclusion from what is known.
For farming and livestock grazing.
you draw nine boxes, and write: tenhorses inside of them, and that is how you put ten horses in nine stalls without having two or more horses in the same stall at the same time, horses housed simultaneously, no constructing or destructing, and no killing the animal (if you did i would always call you a murderer) thnx!!! :)
Yes, female horses, like all horses, have two nostrils.
There are two root words that mean to draw or to press in. Those are tract and trah. Trah is not a commonly used root word.
They're not nibbling: they're grooming each other. Grooming is one of the social bonds that horses use to become and stay friends. Horses are social animals.