No food is the "best". Different horses need different things. There are also a lot of healthy foods for horses, none of which are better than the other. To answer your question though, I'd say apples are pretty healthy. Though they are just treats, they have a lot of nutrients that help with the horse's bones, ligaments, and joints. Though apples are not the only thing you should feed to your horse, they are still pretty healthy treats to give them. Apples are more nutritious than carrots.
it is mostly hay carrots turnips and apples
The horses stomach holds 4 gallons of food and water.
They can usually smell it.
one is eaten by humans the other by horses
No because it can not digest a rabbit
Horses can get quite Obese depending on what they are fed and their activity level. No horse should be allowed to get overweight, it is in fact worse for a horse to be too fat rather than too thin. But the best thing is for a horse to be fit and healthy.
the horses food is brought to them. . .
A loving owner and attention, let your horses be a happy one! they also need the necessary food amount and grooming.
put some horse food into a bucket after the horses work has finished the best food to feed working horses is baileys golden chaff mixed with some speedy beat and baileys horse and pony cubes which is being made for working horses. and put anything else you need in your horses feed.
Grams is the best food to improve running. Horses are fed with it for the same purpose.
Domestic horses find their food in their feed trough. Horses living in the wild usually live where their can find food meaning places where grass grows.
Horses eat grass, they graze.
Horses are herbavores. They eat grass, hay and other plants. They got their food from around them.
Stuffed animal horses, plastic toy horses, horse statues and stuffed dead horses. All other horses that are alive and breathing definitely need water and food.
Quarter Horses are the best horse to do barrels.
food!
Sea horses eat their food through their snout. Sea horses eat continuously as they do not have completely functional digestive systems.
The horses stomach holds 4 gallons of food and water.