Want this question answered?
30
25 acres
You will need more acres per horse in the southern part of Alberta than the north. Average is around 4 acres per horse, and up to 1.5 acre per horse in the northern parts. Though that's on excellent quality pasture: stocking rates may be a bit less on less-quality pasture. Not to mention that horses need room to run, unlike cattle, so you will need to add on a couple extra acres in addition to the amount that they will graze.
you need 5
Answer: 10,404 ft² = 0.238842 acres.
How many acres do you need to own a horse in Raisinville Township, Monroe Michigan
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.
10,000 square feet equates to about 1/4 of an acre.
Any size is sufficient, but how many you need depends on what you want to farm or raise.
You need at least a few acres to own a liger. But the right amount would be about 6 acres. That's how many acres of land I think you should have to own a liger.
This is highly dependent on location, pasture health and forage quantity, the size and weight of the cow, climate, soil health and vegetation. Each area/location has a different stocking rate over the other, and often a rule of thumb of "at least 2 acres" may not be sufficient, especially in those areas where you can rotationaly graze cattle (having grazing pressure of 50 animals per 2 acres for every 12 hours, for instance), or in an area where you can only have 1 cow calf pair for every 25 acres.
we dove hunt on 3 acres but skeet might need more. i would at least exceed 10 acres and not towards another house or a city. 20 gauge birdshots can clear 5 acres if you miss so be careful