Nothing. Thinking of horses reminded me of something. Horses are proof of god's existence, one of many.
Warhorses surely had grain in ancient times. Here is proof from the writings of the Greek cavalry commander Xenophon
Also, the ancient Egyptians fed their chariot horses grain. This can be seen in their extensive carvings on stone walls.
Of course everybody knows, when a horse is worked beyond what good grass can supply they need extra feed. And in some areas of weak grass, at certain times of the year, both horses and cattle need hard feed. A cow not well fed, she will not be expected to produce a calf every year. A horse on just weak grass will loose weight and condition.
On this ranch here, back in the day before feed mills and cow cubes, the grandfather and other pioneer people had corn cribs. These were buildings where ear corn was kept. People would throw some corn still on the cob to the cattle. Of course, a lot of the uncrushed corn went right through the cows, but they made it. They also did not have as many cattle on the pastures as they do now. Then a generation ago, the agriculture scientists came up with new strains of perennial grasses such as coastal bermuda and tropical Bahia. This could raise many more cattle and calves but it had to be fertilized. Back then, fertilizer (made of oil) was cheap. Now it is no longer cheap. You can't make any money that way anymore. So now its back to native grass and rotational grazing. I am not expert on this. This is just what I have been told. Although I am a professional cattle woman. I even have a tax exemption agricultural card. It says Daphne's Dairy. Daphne is my cow. This is a one cow operation.
Warhorses surely had grain in ancient times. Here is proof from the writings of the Greek cavalry commander Xenophon
Also, the ancient Egyptians fed their chariot horses grain. This can be seen in their extensive carvings on stone walls.
Of course everybody knows, when a horse is worked beyond what good grass can supply they need extra feed. And in some areas of weak grass, at certain times of the year, both horses and cattle need hard feed. A cow not well fed, she will not be expected to produce a calf every year. A horse on just weak grass will loose weight and condition.
On this ranch here, back in the day before feed mills and cow cubes, the grandfather and other pioneer people had corn cribs. These were buildings where ear corn was kept. People would throw some corn still on the cob to the cattle. Of course, a lot of the uncrushed corn went right through the cows, but they made it. They also did not have as many cattle on the pastures as they do now. Then a generation ago, the agriculture scientists came up with new strains of perennial grasses such as coastal bermuda and tropical Bahia. This could raise many more cattle and calves but it had to be fertilized. Back then, fertilizer (made of oil) was cheap. Now it is no longer cheap. You can't make any money that way anymore. So now its back to native grass and rotational grazing. I am not expert on this. This is just what I have been told. Although I am a professional cattle woman. I even have a tax exemption agricultural card. It says Daphne's Dairy. Daphne is my cow. This is a one cow operation.
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