If your horse is registered you will already have it's pedigree. But if not, there are a lot of pedigees on www.allbreedpedigree.com. You could look there. You would need to know the name of at least one horse from your horses line. (ie. sire, dam...).
Depends on what you're breeding them for, bloodlines of the horses and popularity of your horses and farm.
A horse with a trace clip is where the horses back and legs are not touch and are left normal
Like the American Quarter Horse, some Aussie Stock horses can and do excel at cutting. Certain bloodlines have very strong cattle working instincts. Study the breed's bloodlines and you should be able to find to best horses for cutting and cattle work.
yes male horses are sometimes bigger than a female horse. But it also depends on the breed and bloodlines of the horse.
No. It is just because of their coloring
Anywhere from $500-$5,000 depending on if they are trained to pull a cart or what their bloodlines are
3,000 BCE
Some animals, such as dogs, cats, and horses, are prized so highly that their human owners only allow them to breed selectively. That way, their bloodlines are kept pure, and there are no questions in their ancestry.
Some animals, such as dogs, cats, and horses, are prized so highly that their human owners only allow them to breed selectively. That way, their bloodlines are kept pure, and there are no questions in their ancestry.
eHow is a good one. Or you can type in the Search toolbar "Horses in Graphite Pencil" and trace it.
Equine breeders can earn from nothing to hundreds of thousands of dollars. Their wage depends on the sale of horses and the bloodlines.
The ancestral stock of the horse of South America descended from horses brought to thewestern hemisphere by the Spanish of Andalusian and other Iberian bloodlines.