When you keep you horse in full board ( or full livery) you keep it at a stables and they do everything for your horse, like grooming, feeding, riding, turning out and mucking out. This is often a good way to keep your horse if you work full time. It can often be expensive though.
Leasing is full (full payment, full use) Half lease is (Half payment of board and usually restricted riding times)
On Howrse, a horse can board at the age of 6 months.
While it's not totally nessessary, it is a great deal easier to have a round pen. You should also have a "stick and string", also known as a "handy stick" or a "carrot stick", or a lariat to use as an extension of your arm to encourage the horse to go. And you should know about body language and what to look for. That's about it. I don't know what it's called but you need this thing that's kind of like a big stick. A crop would probably work. You also have to know how to use body language that a horse would understand.
The cost to board a horse in Florida will vary according to the location and the type of stable and care you are looking for. For basic field board with self care it can cost as low as $200 a month. For a show stable with full care it can cost $1000 a month or more.
Yes, a bronco is referring to a horse that is wild or not tamed.
The horse's tempo is referring to the rhythm or the beat of the horse's footsteps. If a horse has a good tempo, they step evenly and consistently If it has a bad tempo it takes uneven steps and changes speeds often
Yes.
It could be referring to the falabella horse. It is the smallest horse in the world and has short adorable legs.
If Your referring to an airplane then yes
Go to the top right hand corner of your horse's page and click 'board my horse'. Then choose the EC you want.
You have to board your horse and klic at the buton named "lesson"
Board a horse means you keep the horse at a boarding barn, essentially you rent a stall or field for your horse to live in, much like a human will rent a house or apartment.Some types of board are:1.Self-Care: Usually the cheapest option, you are responsible for feeding, mucking, turning out and all other forms of needed care.2. Partial-Care: The own does part of the daily care chores but the other half is done by barn staff.3. Full-Care: The barn staff does all of the work and typically provides all of the feed and bedding whereas Self care does not typically provide feed.4. Pasture board: The horse lives in a pasture either alone or with other horses and typically has a run in shelter available.5. Stall board: The horse has a stall available at all times and may or may not get pasture time.