A feed tub is a plastic looking thing that you put a horses or any other farm animals food into before you put it into their bowl thing . They are good to user if you have a lot of animals and their food is farther away .
You just put the food into it or anything else (like medicine) then put it into their real food bowl thing .
You can look up pictures on Google images =)
#6 3 conducter
Feed TubsTalk to Harry Holterz, owner of the Shellton barn. He will give you two for $100 each.Talk to Dwight Staebulman, owner of the Carrotton barn. He'll give you one feed tub for free.Talk to Donna Hayes, who owns the Crystalton (Ice Isle) barn. She'll sell you one feed tub for $150.Stall BucketsTalk to Aura Hayward, in the Wington barn. She'll give you three (yes, three!) buckets for free.Dwight Staebulman will also give you one stall bucket for free
Yes horses can and should eat off the ground. It's the most natural way for them to eat. However they can ingest parasites and sand this way along with wasting feed. So it's recommended to place the feed in a feed tub or on a rubber stall mat.
Feed TubsTalk to Harry Holterz, owner of the Shellton barn. He will give you two for $100 each.Talk to Dwight Staebulman, owner of the Carrotton barn. He'll give you one feed tub for free.Talk to Donna Hayes, who owns the Crystalton (Ice Isle) barn. She'll sell you one feed tub for $150.Stall BucketsTalk to Aura Hayward, in the Wington barn. She'll give you three (yes, three!) buckets for free.Dwight Staebulman will also give you one stall bucket for free.Once you have gone to all those places, head back to Sumiko!
"Standard tub" is too vague. More information is needed, especially what the 'tub' is used for? Tub of icecream? Tub of lard? Bathtub? etc.
lub tub lub tub lub tub....
tub baths are when you take a bath inside the stone in a tub
a bath in a tub
no
With a tub strainer dumbell wrench.
The words "y tub" in Spanish is translated to "and tub."
Follow the feeding directions found on the back of the bag or on the feed tag. Usually most minerals are fed ad libitum in a mineral tub or feeder (home-made or store-bought) that is easily accessed by the animals any time they want it.