They start mimicing those around them at a very early age (two or three days) when in open pasture but are almost totally reliant on their mother for sustenance for the first three months.
Mares will tend to get antsy right before foaling (ie: a few days before) and they will drip milk from their udders. I've written an article about our mares during foaling @ http://www.ehow.com/how_4526561_prepare-mare-foaling.html
it does not eat grass only meat
Spiders do not eat grass. They are carnivorous predators that typically feed on insects or other small animals like flies, mosquitoes, and other spiders. Grass does not provide the nutrients spiders need to survive.
grass!
No, it's got chemicals in it that will make them ill or even kill them. But they may not realise this and eat the grass anyway so you have to be careful
Quite often a foal learns to eat grass and feed from watching and sampling what its dam eats while it is still nursing from its dam. Curiosity also is another reason for a foal being able to start going from milk to grass and feed.
Any breed can eat grass, many breeds tho r more suseptable to colic or laminitis from eating too much grass. Especially spring grass that has the most nutrients at the roots and the early spring grass as it grow is easy for a horse to eat too much.
A foal will nurse on it's mothers milk for several months, but at about 3 weeks or so they will begin to eat hay and maybe even a bit of foal pellets if offered. Once a foal is weaned at 4 to 6 months old and it becomes a weanling then it will eat grass, hay and pelleted feed or grain as offered.
Cows will eat long grass. Haven't you ever heard, "The cow's in the corn?" Corn is a tall grass.
they usuallo eat y eat long grass horses are the one who eats hay
The first 2 weeks after being born , foal drink milk from there mother . While this 2 weeks is happening teeth begin to grow . By the end of the first month the foal can eat fruits, grass , hay , soft treats , and even some kinds of feed , but mostly still it's mothers milk . At 4 months a foal (filly or colt) can eat grass, hay , feed, fruits and veggies, treats , and anything you would feed a grown horse because at this time the foal is ready to be weened from its mother .
It will usually drink milk from its mother. Or if the mother died, or cannot produce milk, the foal will be fed a formula in a bottle. As it grows it will start eating grass and hay, then eventually all the foods older horses eat.
Foals will begin nibbling at hay or grass soon relatively soon in life. Some will begin nibbling at or even eating it at a month old, some even sooner than this. By three months old the foal should be receiving foal specific feeds and quality hay along with it's mothers milk.
They grow until they stop at a certain age.
They can eat any kind of grass as long as it isn't a weed. They can have clovers too!
none
grass