You should feed your horse 12 to 15 pounds.
The least it can get is probably around a thousand for a fine trained horse, about five hundred for feed AND stabling each month. Though the vet and farrier fees can range, if you have a healthy horse.
it depends on what you feed him/her. there is hay and pellets and oats but there are also other things that your horse may need. my cousins horse is 32 now and she has 3 meals a day contaning about 3scoops of chaff, a scoop of musli, cup of mulasis, oil, alot of water and more. it just depends on what you have to feed your horse.
Well it depends on how much you feed it in a month.
The price of horse feed will vary from horse to horse and even month to month. The best way to figure out the cost would be to figure out how much the horse you would be feeding weighs (1,200 pounds is about average). Then figure out how much of the horses body weight you plan to feed (1%-3% of bodyweight is normal with 2.5% being average.) So then you have how many pounds of food the horse needs,(1200 pounds at 2.5% is 30 pounds of food.). Next figure out what level of work the horse will be doing. No work to light riding means the horse should be receiving 100% of it's food as hay or grass. Moderate to heavy work means you should be feeding an appropriate pelleted feed. Following the bags instructions will tell you how much of the pellets to feed, then you subtract that number from the pounds of feed and what's left over is how much hay you should be feeding. (Say 5 pounds of pellets. so 30-5 =25 pounds of hay.) Next you'll want to add up how much hay and pellets will be fed over the coarse of the year and then the cost to feed them.
When you lease a horse you have to care for it like you own it. If you are leasing at a local barn you may not have to feed it because the barn employees will. When you are leasing you can ride the horse and do pretty much everything you would if it was your own horse. Leasing costs anywhere between $150-$450 a month.
depends if its on your property or some one elses and what everybody charges,farrier feed vet dental gas
at least 200 probably 3-400 dollars a month without rent. Food and hay alone areabout that much
Sweet feed, sweet feed, sweet feed
Feeding a horse beet pulp can vary from horse to horse. Depending on if you have others in with them or how much you horse takes in daily. For me its usually 1 and a half scoops but again it varies. That is a question for your local feed store or your local vet.
It depends on the horse. If your horse is fat then you need to cut down on the horse feed, but if your horse is too skinny then you need to increase their feed until the horse gets back up to his/her weight.
It depends on how much the horse is ridden, and whether or not the horse lives in a pasture, stall, or has limited turn-out.