yes there are in fact! xD when a mare is close to giving birth, she may pace around her stall, look at her side, look as if shes in pain, lay down and get up, and just like humans her water will break so if you see a wet patch youll know your close.
Not without a very careful and costly ultrasound examination.
The soft, jelly like sole of a newborn foal's feet are called Golden Slippers, and are there to prevent the foal's sharp hooves from damaging his dam before or during birth.
A Foal Should Stand Up , in the first 15 - 30 - 1 hour after birth : )
The act of a horse giving birth is called foaling. The newborn horse is called a foal. A male foal is a colt for the first year. A female foal is a filly.
Yes...people do it all the time with no adverse effects to the mare or foal.
Yes, a foal can die before birth.
a mare gives birth to the foal eleven months after conception
It normally takes 11 months for a mare before she gives birth, but occasionally it will be 10 or 12 months.
A cat "queens" or is the act of "queening" when she gives birth to her kittens. :)
To prevent the foal from becoming infected with Parascaris equorum you would have to clean the udders and teats before foaling.
It makes your horse in gestation, and it will produce a foal in 12 months. That means you will have to wait 6 days before your mare gives birth. You can use aging points to hurry it up.
=no you can not take a mare away from its foal straight after its birth=
Not without a very careful and costly ultrasound examination.
A foal
you pick a breed that has the cherry bay coat and breed howrse will randomly pick a coat color from that breed for your foal, or you can just buy one You can use the Hera Pack and choose the coat of the foal. Or you can buy a cherry bay foal. OR, just hope your mare gives birth to one.
The soft, jelly like sole of a newborn foal's feet are called Golden Slippers, and are there to prevent the foal's sharp hooves from damaging his dam before or during birth.
The foal should start moving about the 4 or 5 month but it will be hard to see or feel at this time. At about 8 to 10 months you may see the foal move or kick the mare's side.