it depends on the horse
You can't really cure a horse with food but a bran mash can help. (Just make sure you check with your vet first, you could hurt the horse more if you don't) Mix up a nice, warm bran mash, maybe add some carrots/apple/nuts, depending how well the horse is doing, and add any medicine the vet has given you.Above answer is total rubbish! You don't even know what is wrong with the sick horse yet you offer a treatment that could do more harm than good.always always find out what is wrong first then ask the vets advice on what to feed. You cannot possibly say a bran mash usually does the trick. Age also comes into it. Bran mash is mainly fiber and that isn't always a good thing.The best thing to do is call the vet. He/she can tell you what to do to best take care of your horse.
yes
No, you do not have to mix layers mash with water. Layers mash is designed to be fed dry to chickens. Water should be provided separately for chickens to drink.
Sure. It doesnt really matter. I feed my horse a mix between brumuta and fescue.
Engine Room - 2008 Mix and Mash 1-3 was released on: USA: 22 September 2008
Laying Mash is a specially formulated chicken feed , higher in protein and various minerals including calcium suited to the nutritional needs of hens producing eggs. The mash is ground finer than normal feed and can be fed dry or moist. It also comes in pellet form. Regular scratch feed is a mix of grains with small amounts of protein that is suited to the everyday use for all chickens.
Baby sparrows are to be feed by strictly insect diet. All of them requires high protein consumption and less fluid. Never feed them with liquid directly into the mouth for it may cause them pneumonia.
You click on the feed tab on your horses page, and then click on the scroll down menu about mashes. Then select caloric. You have to be in an EC though at the time.
Tony .
Eric Prydz - Pjanoo
I use it in combination with alfalfa, my horses love it!
Horses favourite foods are carrots, apples, sugar cudes, mimiwheat cereal, strawberries, oats, horse cookies, and if you mix apples, oats, and molassas in a feed bucket. My horses love all of theses. -SLB