No it doesn't, Well only when they Pee.
No. Male horses (geldings and stallions) will stretch out to urinate. Mares (females) spread their hind legs and squat somewhat.
Stallions often get treated more like monsters than horses. However, many more people are starting to let their stallions be pastured with other horses. Pregnant mares and geldings make great companions for a stallion. However, it is best to only keep one or the other with a stallion; the stallion may get aggressive towards the gelding, thinking it needs to compete for the mare. Just like mares and geldings, some stallions and geldings won't get along. It is best to slowly introduce the two over a fence on leads for the first few times. Some stallions may be too aggressive to have another horse as a companion. In that case, goats, cattle, sheep, donkeys, etc. may work!
As a general rule, most mares get moody when they come in heat. Stallions are also generally as less well-behaved than mares in estrus, mostly because of the fact that their hormones start raging when they smell a female in heat. Geldings on the other hand, are generally the best tempered type of horse out there because they have been castrated and do not have the raging hormone issue going on like mares and stallions do. However, every horse is different. Some mares will be better than some stallions, some stallions will be better than geldings, and some mares will be better than some geldings. It all depends on how they've been socialized and trained that really depicts how well-tempered they can be.
Geldings have already been gelded: They are castrated male horses, which means their testes have already been removed. To "geld" is to castrate a male horse like a stallion or colt. Thus, geldings do not need to be castrated because they have already had the surgery done on them earlier in their lives. Horses (more specifically stallions or colts) can be gelded at any age but most are gelded when they are around yearlings or two-year olds, usually right after their testicles drop, or before they reach sexual maturity. However it's not uncommon to have stallions gelded after reaching sexual maturity, especially if they are no longer needed for breeding purposes, or even to calm the horse down, since stallions are more difficult to handle due to hormones than mares or geldings.
A hinny is a hybrid between a male horse and a female donkey. It looks like a horse but is a little smaller.
No, not all ponies are girls. Ponies, like other equines, can be male or female. Male ponies are called stallions or geldings, while females are called mares. The term "ponies" refers to their size and breed rather than their gender.
Like any other stallions do.
A long fat stick
Fillies at the age of four become mares and coming into heat is when mares seem to say to the stallions hey I'm ready to breed! So the age a female horse goes into heat is four just remember foals, colts, fillies, stallions and geldings especially geldings don't go into heat.
yes but not for to long. and when you say heat, i hope you mean like hot weather by your question. ****************************** lol to who ever wrote that^^ but if your mare is in heat you should not ride her! It could be dangerous, specially around stallions and some geldings. When my mare went into heat she went all weird xD haha
Stallions, like all other horses, must have a balanced ratio of vitamins and minerals in their diet to stay healthy.
oh defineately they could be gelded late and be sassy around mares and try to 'mount' other horses or even a human and still be territorial and even cause fights, herding other horses, geldings or mares, even stallions which could turn out very bad, they could even have something else like inbreeding or maybe it's just of young age even, maybe even elderly age as well, it could also be nutrition imbalance, like they need something paticular, talk to your vet if you have that type of horse hope that helps