If the horse is registered with a breed society or studbook you are usually required to notify them of the death of the animal. Some societies will mark the horses papers as deceased and then return them to you.
no.
Ask the breeder that your horse was from.
The papers are called obituaries, individually called obituary .
If you have somehow lost your horse's registration papers its important to get them replaced. I'm assuming you know the breed of your horse so you need to contact the breed registry. There will probably be a fee (should be small) to reissue papers and you may have to prove you own the horse and that the horse did have papers. For American Thoroughbreds you should contact the Jockey Club, Quarter Horses are registered with the AQHA and so on. If you know the city where the headquarters you can get the number from information.
You'r vet should give them to you.
Haman
job hunting
No, horse feces does not turn into hay. Horse feces is composted and it turns into horse manure. This is used as a fertilizer.
Of course the most accurate way is to have the registration papers but a general idea can be obtained by looking at the horse's teeth.
a horse that has gotten papers.the papers include information like any markings on the horse, birth date, approx. weight, and show name.
The registration papers will contain the vital statistics on the registered horse. The horse will have a number that will be his for his whole life. It will list the horse's family tree usually several generations back on both the sire's and dam's side with their registration numbers also. Most new registration papers have a color photo of the horse, (usually baby pictures since most horses are registered shortly after birth) a of color and markings. A lot of horse registries now require DNA info and this should be on there also. Then there should be a 'seal' the official stamp of that registry. Example:The American registry for Thoroughbreds is the Jockey Club and you will see their stamp or seal on the papers. When a horse changes owners the registry must be notified and the appropriate changes are made. There is a small fee any time a change is made on a horse's papers. These papers are important so keep them in a safe place.
Take it to the NRA.