DENSITY : density is the ratio of mass and volume of the substance density=mass/volume RELATIVE DENSITY : It is the ratio of density of a substance to the density of water
relative density is related to the density of water. i.e. a relative density of 19.3 means that it has a density 19.3 times the density of water. The density of water is 1g/ml therefore the density of gold is 19.3g/ml
An object will float if it has less density than the density of the liquid.An object will float if it has less density than the density of the liquid.An object will float if it has less density than the density of the liquid.An object will float if it has less density than the density of the liquid.
Density=mass/volume density of water in the whole earth is 1
subtract 0.0011 from the density in vac to get density in air.
Haylage can certainly be, yes, and often is.
Forage (silage or haylage).
Haylage?
food and hay/haylage =)
Well that would greatly depend on the level of work the pony was doing. If it was in strenuous work then feeding both Hard feeds and Haylage might be useful. However if the pony is in anything less that highly strenuous work Haylage would likely be able to supply enough nutrients and energy to keep the pony healthy.
Chaff, conditioning mix and hay/haylage.
Yes, many people feed their sheep haylage. Silage can carry listeriosis so it is recommended that you feed only good quality haylage or hay. If using haylage it should be fed as fresh as possible, don't just crack open a round bale and leave it out for a month, it'll quite likely go bad and it's not good for your sheep if it gets moldy. The best thing to do is to find the best quality you can in bales of a good practical size for your needs, that's why so many people still use square bales, because they're easier to handle.
It depends on the horse. Ask your vet to see what's right for your horse(s).
NEVER feed mouldy hay to horses( or mouldy pellets, grains or chaff) Horses will usually tell you if the hay is mouldy(unless they are very hungry) but not wanting to eat it. Dont confuse mouldy hay with silage or haylage, but be verycareful feeding silage and haylage to horses.
chaff...forage 'n' Fibre...limestone powder...garlic...pony nuts... HI FI...haylage...carots...apples...kiwi...hay...
No, dusty hay is very bad for horses to eat, it can lead to respiratory illnesses and even to colic which can be life threatening. The same applies to mold in hay. If the hay you have is a little dusty you can try soaking it for ten to twenty minutes right before feeding.
for a 16hh horse there total daily intake is 30lbs, if the horse is in light work there diet is 20%concentrates and 80%bulk