A jenny is a female donkey. When bred to a horse (stallion) the resulting foal is referred to as a hinney.
A jack is a male donkey. When bred to a horse (mare) the resulting foal is referred to as a mule.
There are apparent differences in the hinney and the mule with the mule being much preferred.
Well mules with mules they will be just like horses.(They will have alpha mare or alpha gelding and so on and so forth) but when you have mules with horses mules are always on the bottom of the food chain....They will give into what the horses wants them to do.
yes because mules are female horses
horses
All events for horses are open to mules as well (and the mules usually win), but mules specifically are raced in Texas. Mules cannot race in thoroughbred or quarterhorse races, and, they cannot out run either breed..Horses are faster than mules.
Horses and mules were used to pull barges through smaller waterways with little or no current.
No they are not. Horses are related to Zebras, Donkeys, and Mules.
From mules and horses.
Yes.
Oxen, mules and horses
Donkeys can mate and reproduce, either with other donkeys or with horses to produce hybrid offspring called mules or hinnies. Mules are the offspring of a male donkey (jack) and a female horse (mare), while hinnies are the offspring of a female donkey (jenny) and a male horse (stallion).
Horses, mules or donkeys.
mules horses and pony (ocasionally)