The Penny Breed. i write stories so i could think of one if i new what colour the mare was.
You should breed a stallion at the age of 5.
Well you really you just need to collect breyers and breed a breyer mare and stallion and you get a filly or colt!
If your horse is a mare wait until the horse has reached sexual maturity and then click public coverings but if you have purchased a stallion go to your mare and click private coverings and ask for your mare to breed with a stallion then after a number of months your mare will give birth, then once the foal doesn't live with it's mother start again!
Yes. Put the walnut in the ground, water it, keep it in the right climate and weather, care for it, and eventually you will grow a chestnut tree with chestnuts.
Cherry, Chestnut. cottonwood cypress
book 24
for a start i hope you mean 'called'. and a male horse is called either a stallion if it has not been castrated (bits chopped off) or a colt which is a younger stallion or a gelding if it has been castrated.
Some trees that start with C are:camel thorncashewcedarcherrychestnutchinaberryChristmas Treecoconut palmcrab-applecrape myrtlecryptomeriacypressconifer
Coconut Chestnut Cashew
They breed in november. They start breeding when they are 1 years old.
It is a personal preference. Personally, I like the chestnut UGGs best. After a wwhile the chocolate ones start to fade into a weird gray color, but if you are getting slippers chocolate if fine
Foundation stock (mares and stallion) are the progenatiors of a whole breed or a bloodline within a breed. A foundation mare should have as near perfect conformation as possible and have a very good temperament. At some point they should also have had a decent show career / record to prove they are worthy of breeding. The same thing applies to stallions. If you are trying to create a new breed (not a good idea there are enough breeds already) then you'll want a mare with the qualities you are looking for in the new breed. If it's to start a new bloodline within an already existing breed, then all of the above still holds true, but you'll need the mare to be registered, as well as any stallion she is bred to. It can take decades for a new bloodline to take off, so breeders must be patient and not over breed.