Horses that are placed on Airplanes are preloaded into a large metal stall and then slid into a compartment designed to carry them. They remain in the stall until they arrive at their destination. If the horse becomes upset then it would be tranquilized.
lots of them.
No, horses cannot fly on commercial airplanes due to space, weight, and safety constraints. Instead, they are typically transported by specialized horse transport vehicles or by air cargo planes equipped with spacious stalls for horses.
They use special equine transport planes.
When a movement occurs in two planes, it is called turbulence.
Nothing HAPPENS! They can intersect in a point or a line.
We can use our feet, bikes, cars, trains, planes and even horses.
Altitude increases.
They intersect at a point
What happens is you epic FAIL at making paper planes.
Angles are formed between them
Yes, they can go on passenger planes. There are special passengers that can carry both passengers and cargo at the same. KLM Royal Dutch Airlines operates the 747-400 combi, an aircraft that is capable of carrying both cargo and passengers at the same time. The horses will be carried inside the cargo hold and will be pressurised similar to the passenger compartments. Normally a chartered specialised cargo plane would do its job, but due to the special attention needed for the horses, it will be done via the Combi aircraft.
The wild Kaimanawa horses live on tussock planes shrublands forest remnants and gravel and pumice fields