Meadow
MEADOW
It is. Horses usually love timothy hay and it's a great general hay, mixing well with other types like alfalfa #2 or a good red or green oat. Not available in some areas but if you have it in yours, your lucky.
basicly any type of hay, grass, and veggies It depends where the horse is kept when its outside most of the time the diet primerly is grass but in the winter hay will be needed. If the horse is inside the diet varies.
Hay is made from forage grasses and legumes.
Hay can certanly be bad for horses! It all depends on where the hay was grown, when it was grown and ahrvested, and how long it's been stored before coming to you. If the hay you have for your horse has a slightly musky smell or looks to have a type of fungus growing on it, don't give it to the horses!!! It could make them very sick! Colic can be causedby rotting or bad hay, so always be careful! Colic can be deadly.
Hay is dried grass, and as such is the remains of a producer.
Orchard hay is a type of grass hay grown from orchard grass. This type of hay is excellent horse feed, but can be fed to most any grazing animal.
hay is usually grown in large feilds or alot of land it is made of dead grass and other stuff!
Naturally, like any other grass or plant that has its roots in the soil. When the grass and/or legumes reach a certain height or stage in their life cycle, they are cut, dried, then collected as hay.
Hay is made from grasses that are planted and grown specifically for animal feed. The plants are allowed to grow to a certain level of maturity then cut, let to sun dry, then baled. Hay can also be made from several species of legumes such as Alfalfa , clover, and a few others.
A timothy grass hay field at maturity is around 40-inches tall, filled with bunch grass. The stems of timothy hay end in a seed head. The 2 to 6-inch leaves are a soft, light green.
peas corn hay
How tall does your grass grow - -
The three most grown crops in Oregon are hay, grass seed, and wheat. Hay is produced for livestock feed, grass seed is a key commodity for turf and forage, and wheat is cultivated for food products and livestock feed.
Yes it is. It's a warm-season grass (or a C4 grass) that is best grown in warmer climates, and is commonly used in the South as a pasture/hay grass for livestock.
If they were given a choice, they'd choose grass over hay any day. But during the winter months when there is no grass to eat, hay is their primary choice.
Yes. They like any kind of hay, really.
Cows are grown up; they are mature female bovines. They eat grass, hay, silage, and other forages, basically.