It depends on how well breed it is, how old it is, and the price also varies with different people (some want more than others).
This depends, where you keep your horse and what your going to do with it? If you are going to board it at a farm, then boarding costs which can be anywhere from about 200-1,000 a month. Then the costs of the vet,food, and blankets ect. Then if you do shows the cost of those and the tack you need.
The American Paint Horse is ideal for farm living. These horses are versatile, loyal, strong and sound and make wonderful companions for any horse lover. Paints are the Quarter Horse's colorful cousin. They share many of the same bloodlines and as a result have the Quarter Horse's temperment and 'can do' attitude. And I know this for a fact because I own Paints and have for many years. Once you get past their beautiful coats you will find a horse that loves people and one that wants to please.
It depends, if your talking about baby animals or human babys Baby animals you can get from the dairy farm, or horse stables, the horse stables and dairy farm, and so forth take one day to harvest and you have a chance every time to get a new animal, if you have animals inside of them. other than baby animals, no you can not.
It depends on the age, quality, conformation and purity. Also on the prestige of the breeding farm, if he's from a breeding farm at all!
White Horse Farm was created in 1770.
To get a horse farm on smeet, It should be obvious by now that all you have to do is go to the actual Smeet Farm and click on the big sign on the barn that says "Get your free horse farm!"
The most popular horse in North America is the American Quarter horse with the largest breed registry in the world. I would suggest that you do very careful reseach before thinking of starting a horse farm in todays market. There is a glut of horses and the prices for horses are at historically low values.
horse farm
It depends on the age, quality, conformation and purity. Also on the prestige of the breeding farm, if he's from a breeding farm at all!
A ranch. it is not called a farm.
Yes he is a farm horse who works by ploughing the fields or something like that. Farm horses have to be very strong.
I feel there are two questions here:Serfs could never ever afford a horse in the middle ages.The cost of feed: The cost of feed was immaterial as to own a horse you had to be rich enough that others were paying you tax and how they paid was farm products mostly.