I believe their are more than three types of hay. Alfalfa, oat, and your grass hay. Tifton, Bermuda, bahia and a wide variety of others.
Chaff, Pony nut/cubes and Summer mix
Lucerne, Barley and Oaten Hays
One bail of hay is not good enough for a horse for the winter. A horse should have a lot more feed than that. Depending on what kind of hay the bail is made out of, because there are a lot of different types of hay that have different nutrient values. If you feed grass hay (a popular kind) one horse can be fed a ration of hay twice a day (or once a day twice being the better choice) until the bail is used up. One bail can last between 3to7 days depending on the size of the bale. For a whole winter, a horse can go through almost a ton of hay. This is if the hay is the only feed a horse gets and is not able to graze on any grass or pasture. The amount of hay fed will be less if there is fair pasture available.
Alfalfa Hay Horse Grain There are a few more types of foods a horse can eat l
hay oat or hay more hay p.s. if this is for a croos word puzzle assignment at school or something shame shame on you
You can feed Jiggs Hay to a horse. Jiggs Hay is a hybrid and designed to be easy to grow, and more nutritious for the horse.
Are you asking is it okay to ride a horse when they are on just hay? It is completely fine to ride a horse that is on just hay. My horse is fat as a cow and she was on all hay, no feed all summer. I rode her regularly.
A horse eats grass or hay and no animals.
Not much. Horse hay is mostly green hay that comprises of 95 to 100% grass. Cow hay, on the other hand, can be as green and grassy as horse hay, but can also be hay that is much higher in legume content (often up to 90%) than horse hay.
That all depends on the horse really, there are man different types of hay that horses can eat. Some horses have allergies to some types of hay and some horses can eat any type of hay. If you are talking about actual grass instead of hay, then you cannot graze horses purely on most grasses because it does not contain enough nutrients to keep a horse healthy.
One bail of hay is not good enough for a horse for the winter. A horse should have a lot more feed than that. Depending on what kind of hay the bail is made out of, because there are a lot of different types of hay that have different nutrient values. If you feed grass hay (a popular kind) one horse can be fed a ration of hay twice a day (or once a day twice being the better choice) until the bail is used up. One bail can last between 3to7 days depending on the size of the bale. For a whole winter, a horse can go through almost a ton of hay. This is if the hay is the only feed a horse gets and is not able to graze on any grass or pasture. The amount of hay fed will be less if there is fair pasture available.
Alfalfa Hay Horse Grain There are a few more types of foods a horse can eat l
hay oat or hay more hay p.s. if this is for a croos word puzzle assignment at school or something shame shame on you
horse=livestock+hay
Different types of grasses, hay and grains
You can feed Jiggs Hay to a horse. Jiggs Hay is a hybrid and designed to be easy to grow, and more nutritious for the horse.
The price of hay will vary from farm to farm.This is due to the use of different fertilizers, growing techniques, irrigation and many other factors. It would be best to consult with a local Agricultural Extension Agency about what types of hay tend to go for what kind of prices in your area as the price will also be affect by the type of hay.
No, horse feces does not turn into hay. Horse feces is composted and it turns into horse manure. This is used as a fertilizer.
Any hay can founder a horse, it is not what the horse eats but how much it eats. Some feed can founder a horse faster than others. Peanut hay is one of those.