Silage is not something that eats; rather, it is a type of fermented fodder made from green foliage crops, such as corn, grass, or alfalfa, that are harvested and stored to provide feed for livestock. The fermentation process helps preserve the nutrients in the crops, making it a valuable source of nutrition for animals like cows, sheep, and goats, especially during winter months when fresh forage is scarce.
no
No. Cows are herbivores, meaning that they are strictly plant-eating animals, not omnivores nor carnivores. Cows eat grass, hay and silage and should eat just grass, hay and silage.
No, horses should not be fed silage. Silage is a fermented feed stuff and single compartmeted stomaced animals can not digest it properly. Horses fed silage can become very ill, colic and even die. Silage is meant for ruminant animals.
Absolutely, yes!! Cows LOVE silage, it's like candy to a bunch of +1000 lb 5-year olds!
they posibly could if they could not find any food.
The same as female sheep - grass, hay, silage and grain
The exact same thing that any "normal cow" would eat: grass, hay, silage and grain.
The exact same thing that any "normal cow" would eat: grass, hay, silage and grain.
Cows do not eat (nor drink) milk. They drink water and eat forages like grass, hay, silage and grains.
In a silage pit or as bales
It would most likely eat grass or grain.
A bull eats anything that cows eat, including grass, hay, silage, and grain.