No,no,no. NOT $800. Right now $300-$500. Depends on the dam and sires behavior. Good luck!
arabian
An Arabian is a breed of horse but it was the first breed of horse every horse has a little bit of Arabian in it so if you say that Secretariat was a FULL throughbred that would be wrong he would have a little bit of Arabian in him
it costs 2050
It depends on the breed of the horse, and the amount of training the horse has.
No horse of any breed should have too much sugar. However, in small quantities, sugar makes a really nice treat for your horse.
The registration fees can be as little as $300 and as much as $1,500. You can buy a Arabian horse from as little as free to as much as $400,000
Anywhere from 2,000 to 8,000 dollars, depending on the breed. and if it has papers or not.
Arabian horse racing is played in much the same way as any other form of horse racing.
Arabian horses tend to weigh from 850-1,100 pounds.
An Arabian with or without papers will vary in cost due to the economy, conformation, show record, age, sex , height and many other factors.
The first breed of horse was the Arabian Horse. All other light horse breeds derive from the Arabian (not including draft horses, ponies or donkeys). In other words, every breed of horse has various amounts of Arabian blood in them. One of the first horses to be bred down from the Arabian was the Thoroughbred, for, of course, racing. Every thoroughbred's pedigree dates back to one of three Arabian horses...... The Byerly Turk (1680s), the Darley Arabian (1704), and the Godolphyn Arabian (1729). There are many Thoroughbreds today with as many as 118,000 foals being born every year, worldwide. Don't quote me on this, but I believe there are 267 breeds of horses on this earth, but the "Arabian" horse is the only pure breed that has ever existed. They have beauty, intelligence, strength and stamina, and were so loved and revered by their Bedouwin masters that they brought them into their tents to protect them. The Arabian stands between 14.2 and 15.2 hands, typically, while the Thoroughbred stands between 15.2 and 17 hands tall. Some of the other breeds which derive from the Arabian are, The Morgon, The Quarter Horse, The Lippizan, The Saddlebred, the Standardbred, to name only a few, including the Mustang. For much more information about the horse, type in Evolution of the Horse, and see what the very first horses looked like, over 4.000 years ago.
it can cost any amout it depends on what breed and how much the person is willing to give thank you for your answers we are happy to answer them