I use hay. It depends on how old your horse is on how much much you give them. My horse is 3 and I give 3 flakes, my sister's is 8 and she gives him four, but it depends on your preference
It is food the horse finds for itself when it is released.
A horse in a good pasture will do.
Yes
Yes that is the most common way to get fresh forage
A horse's diet should consist of at least 60-70% forage, such as hay or pasture, even if they are in light work. Forage provides essential fiber, promotes digestive health, and helps maintain a healthy weight for the horse. Adequate forage intake is crucial for overall well-being and should not be overlooked in a horse's diet.
You can place your horse in the pasture in order to give him forage. So long as he stays there long enough to give him the amount that he needs, you will not need to feed him forage from the feed box.
Horses should have a forage diet. mainly all of their diet should consist of hay, and grass. apples and carrots can be fed ocaisionaly. grains and supplements should be talked to a vet about, depending on your horse's conditions.
Hay (forage) and grain if they need it. Each horse's diet should fit them specifically based on their needs.
It can so long as the grass is of good quality and there is at least one acre per horse , 2 acres are better.
You feed your horse by clicking the feed link to the top left of his page and selecting the amount of forage and grains to give.
Depends on how big the pasture is, how many horses. If there are more horses than year round forage, I'd suggest hay. It also depends on what grows in your pasture? Any alfalfa or timothy? Those are really good for the horse(s).
450?