Not if you're careful about how much you give them. If you feed it in moderation, no it won't harm them.
M. J. Gamroth has written: 'Selecting and culling dairy cattle' -- subject(s): Dairy cattle, Productivity, Evaluation, Standards 'Flame-clipping udders on dairy cows' -- subject(s): Mastitis, Prevention 'Feeding grass straws to cattle and horses' -- subject(s): Feeding and feeds, Horses, Crop residues as feed, Cattle, Straw as feed
Yes, but it is not acceptable for dairy cattle.
There is no one amount that all horses should eat. A horse only needs sweet feed if it needs more energy to complete it's daily job. A horse should eat between 1.5% and 3% of it's own bodyweight daily and the vast majority of that should be forage such as hay or grass.
Feed bunk.
A feeding trough for cattle is also called a feed bunk, a manger, or simply a feed trough. Everyone has their own preferences to what they call such an object where cattle eat their grain from, depending on language and region.
Normal feeding - get a cribbing collar
feed stuff is the food provided for cattle and other livestocks
Wild horses will feed whenever they can as long as they can. There is no specific TIME.
The root vegetable swede
Yes. Theobromine doesn't affect cattle like it affects horses, dogs, cats and rodents, but chocolate is still high in carbohydrates and starch which would affect the animal just like feeding it too much grain would. So moderation should be practiced when feeding cattle chocolate, just like feeding grain.
To inexpensively feed livestock like sheep, cattle, and horses.
Molars help cattle chew their feed or fodder.