Standardbred
[Horse Isle Answer]
With the Norman stock not fast enough for the French, they started breeding that horse with English thoroughbreds. They also continued to keep working on a new breed so English Hunter stallions were added to the mix and eventually mixing all those breeds with the Norfolk Roadster making a French Trotter.
Horse Isle: Standardbred.
Standardbred [ HorseIsle Answer ]
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If heat is added to it.
added
Q: Where does the Azteca originate from?A: MexicoQ: How deep can the Bashkir Curly dig for it's food?A: 3 feetQ: When was the National Show Horse first developed?A: 1981Q: The Welsh Cob can sustain what gait for long distances?A: TrotQ: What breed's lines were added to the French Trotter to make it a faster horse?A: StandardbredQ: What was the original Knabstrup's height?A: 14.3 hands highQ: What was the Suffolk Punch originally bred for?A: PlowingQ: Which of these were NOT crossed to create the Gelderland?A: AppaloosaQ: The Missouri Fox Trotter is most frequently used by whom?A: Forest RangersQ: The Friesian was an ancestor of what breed?A: Fell Ponyanswer from HorseJmpr on bay and pally
Q: Where does the Azteca originate from?A: MexicoQ: How deep can the Bashkir Curly dig for it's food?A: 3 feetQ: When was the National Show Horse first developed?A: 1981Q: The Welsh Cob can sustain what gait for long distances?A: TrotQ: What breed's lines were added to the French Trotter to make it a faster horse?A: StandardbredQ: What was the original Knabstrup's height?A: 14.3 hands highQ: What was the Suffolk Punch originally bred for?A: PlowingQ: Which of these were NOT crossed to create the Gelderland?A: AppaloosaQ: The Missouri Fox Trotter is most frequently used by whom?A: Forest RangersQ: The Friesian was an ancestor of what breed?A: Fell Pony
particles move faster in a liquid when there's More added to it
To make it colder, faster.
they spread apart and move faster when energy is added.
The French started breeding their Norman warhorses with English TBs and Norfolk Trotters (now extinct) in the 19th century. These breeds added finesse and speed to the previously heavier Norman breeds. They ended up with the Anglo-Norm, which was the prototype for the Selle Francais. In 1958 the Selle Francais was recognised as a breed and the first studbook was opened in 1965.