well ya but mostly for horses, goats , and zoo animals. ......... it kinda depends on what animal you have
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 contains more nutrients than straw, as hay is cut from grasses or legumes that are used as animal feed. It can provide essential nutrients such as protein, fiber, and energy for animals. Straw, on the other hand, is mainly used for bedding or as a substrate in animal housing and has lower nutritional value compared to hay.
Hay is typically stored in a barn or shed on a farm. It is commonly found in bales or stacks to keep it dry and protected from the elements. Hay is used as animal feed for livestock such as cows, horses, and sheep.
Hay is used to feed animals when grass is not available.
Hay is dried grass used as animal feed or bedding, straw is the dry stalks of cereal plants used for animal bedding or mulch, and propane is a colorless gas used as a fuel for heating, cooking, and powering vehicles. They are all different in their composition, purpose, and usage.
They are called bales. Other materials besides hay can also be bundled with twine, and they are also called bales.
No. Hay and grain was.
Feed usually. Fodder usually refers to roughage, ie. grass, hay, chaff, and so roughage or bulk is probably appropriate as well.
No. Why would you ever feed a llama bamboo? They eat grass and hay... If you want to feed an animal bamboo, buy a panda.
Hay is neither a fruit nor a vegetable; it is dried grass or other herbaceous plants that are harvested and used as animal feed. Typically made from grasses like timothy or alfalfa, hay provides essential nutrients for livestock. It is primarily used in agriculture rather than consumed directly by humans.
Hay.
haylofts are upper stories in a barn to hold hay which is pitch-forked down into the animal's feed trough.