Grains for horses corn, wheat, oats, barley, sorgum etc grow all over this country (and world) with corn and oats being the most common in the mid-west 'corn belt'
a horse
by grain
They did not have enough land to grow grain. Only 1/4 of the land was usable for growing grain. They traded for grain in the region.
Depends on the weight of the horse, the age of the horse, how hard the horse is working, the type of grain, and how well they keep their weight on just hay. The nutritional value of the hay your horse is being fed can also affect how much grain your horse needs. If you are trying to put weight on, the horse generally needs more grain. If you're trying to reduce the weight of your horse, they generally need less or none at all. If a horse is not being worked at all, they do not need grain unless they cannot keep weight on with out it.
A horse should be fed mainly hay, and only a little little bit of grain a day.Try a cup or less of grain a day.
No because only grain comes from wheat
Yes. Oats are a certain type of grain. Other grains are flaxen, wheat or rice bran, and beet pulp.
It really depends. If you give a horse grain in the winter then yes you should in the summer but just less then you do in winter.
Well grain will put weight on, not help him lose it. If the horse is overweight then you should slowly cut back on the grain and feed more grass hay instead. If the horse is in moderate to heavy work and needs the grain then choose a manufactured pellet type feed designed for overweight horses.
Corn
the type of grain that has the best energy source for your horse is wheat.
it like a human,the horse grow with good food and age.