It really depends on the type; age; fitness level and health of the horse but for my two horses I feed them one bale (small square) a day in the warm weather. When the temp drops below minus 12 degrees Celsius I add another half bale. (making it a bale and a half a day)
When I say a bale a day I mean they each eat half a bale, making it a bale in total.
Mfire
PS
MY horses are what we call "Easy Keeper's" meaning the don't have problems keeping the weight on or off, some horses may eat a lot less then this or a lot more.
The number of horses a farrier can shoe in a day varies depending on factors such as the experience and efficiency of the farrier, the temperament of the horses, and the complexity of the shoeing required. On average, a skilled farrier can shoe between 6-10 horses in a day.
There are 720 possible orders in which 6 horses can finish a race.
4839238 if each horse is 6 feet long which, depends on the breed
Usually 6, but it depends on the coach size,! Xx
6 times a day
The number of horses a farrier can shoe in a day varies depending on factors such as the experience and efficiency of the farrier, the temperament of the horses, and the complexity of the shoeing required. On average, a skilled farrier can shoe between 6-10 horses in a day.
6 stumps and 4 bails. One on each side of the pitch. 3 are allined and on top of them are 2 bails. This is the same on the other side of the pitch.
6 horses you can have 3 foals and 3 horses (ds)
Katie has got 6 or 7 horses.
Two i think, a horse and a dog
Horses sleep about 2-6 hours a day.
6
about 5
as of February 5, 2011 there are 3813165 horses, but there are almost 6 million players, and horses are having foals still.
It all depends on how many horses you have. You need one acre per horse for forage. So, say you have 6 horses, you need 6 acres.
Bails. These are short pieces of wood, normally turned on a lathe to give them pleasant curves. The stumps have small grooves in the top and the ends of the bails sit in the grooves so that the wind or whatever would not blow them off. There are two bails on each set of stumps resting on the outer stumps and the middle stump. They are a simple device to show whether the ball hit the stump, even a tiny amount, as if the bail falls off the batsman is out.
There are 24 to start with and 1/4 are black. 24/4=6, so there's 6 black horses. 24-6 gives us 18 horses who are not black. 1/3 of those are brown. 18/3=6 brown horses. 18-6 = 12. Evenly divided means that half are white and half are grey, so 12/2=6. 6 are white, six are grey. So in the end this was just a really complicated way of saying that 1/4 are each color. There're 6 black horses, 6 brown horses, 6 white horses, and 6 grey horses.