It all depends on your horses amount of exercise and their current weight. There are all sorts of different grains and types of hay. If your horse is a easy keeper (does not loose weight or gain weight easily, usually stays at the same weight) you should feed him/her plain grass hay with limited grain. If your horse is involved in any sort of competition and is usually working in some way you would be better off feeding him/her alfalfa with grain like Purina Performance Horse feed. If your horse is older you could feed them something like John Lyons or Purina Senior Horse feed. It all just depends on what your horse is like to suite horse horses own personal needs feed wise.
Pavo is a top quality brand of food product for horses. It is one of the most nutritious choices made to be specifically a healthy choice for racing breeds of horses.
Most people will feed their growing foals a suppliment for the first year. After that, depending on the individual animal, and his work load they may still need extra vitamins and minerals. Most horses are on a hay/grain diet and most grain products have the vitamins and minerals already in them. So what they don't get from the hay they get from the grain and are pretty well balanced with this feeding program. Horses that have a heavy work load or are stressed (show horses) will benefit from some extra nutrition.
It depends how hard they are worked, but most do.
the food that you need the most of is the Grain food group.
Yes you can, just remove the stem first. Banana's and their peels are good for horses and most love them. Some horses however will only eat either the inside part or just the peel, it's all in each horses preference.
Chinese food is great because it includes many food groups. The rice is a healthy grain, and most dishes include vegetables. The sauces used in Chinese food are sweet or salty and very flavorful.
horses don't have to be "trained" to eat anything. usually they'll eat hay, grain, grass and oats. some horses will taste other things including people food, most of them will just spit it back out.
The most important survival adaptation is that they can survive on the grain that is fed to them by humans. Horses are not meant to eat grain, but grass or hay, and that's why some horses have problems with ulcers and colic.
horses get the most from oats and grains with malassas in it
Most horses want love food and safety.
Rolled oats, corn, triple crown
Fruit is not the most important food group. Grain is the most important food group.