It is possible for a yearling stallion to impregnate a filly or mare; however, most trainers and breeders recommend waiting until the horse is 3-4 years old before using him as a stud.
Devote the time leading up to breeding age handling, socializing, teaching manners, and training for your chosen sport. Stallions that are properly trained are better behaved and safer for both the handler and mare.
You should breed a stallion at the age of 5.
No, a stallion is a male horse, more specifically one that can breed.(as opposed to a gelding, or castrated male, who cannot breed)
by either pm-ing the owner of the stallion and asking for a covering, or going to public coverings, select a stallion and click breed. please not that you cannot breed your horse until it is 2 and a half years old, they age by two months every night.
Depends on what breed your looking at. you dont pay for colour you pay for the breed. My black stallion was given to me.
There is no mineral or vitamin to take the urge to breed away from a stallion. A stallion has one purpose in mind and in life. The only cure for this is to have him gelded.
It depends on the breed of stallion.
a stallion
Can a man with one testicle breed? The answer is YES
A stallion only needs a mare.
A "stallion" is not a breed. It's a gender. A female horse is a mare and a male horse is a stallion. If the stallion has been neutered or castrated, he then is called a gelding. A stallion therefore, is an unaltered male of any breed of horse. There are miniature stallions all the way up to the Shire stallions.
Secretariat, an American racehorse, was a Thoroughbred, a breed of horse that excels in sports (especially racing).
You need to have at least one mare the age of breeding, ready to breed, and have found or have a stallion and at least 100 coins. Your stallion: You click on his name, see his page, go to the bottom of his page, click on breed, and click on the mare you want to breed with is she's ready to breed. If you have 100 coins, you breed them, and you get no foal, try again. Sometimes that foal wasn't meant to be, because they want more money for it. Yes, the vet isVERY greedy. If it's another person's stallion, you go to the bottom, see the breeding fee, and if you have enough money, and a breed-able mare, than it's basically the same with your stallion, accept they may take some time to say yes or no.