It depends on the breed, size of parents and some other factors. Horses can range from about 9hh to 18hh (including ponies, ponies go up to 14hh after that you have a park hack and then so on but that is not so important) this is measured from the ground to the horse's wither (which is the hump at the base of the neck) not to the head as some people think.. I hope this answers your question.
A Fallabella pony.
Yes, stallions are grown male horses, ponies a kind of horse that never grow to the size of a full grown horse
The size of an animal when they are fully grown varies. Full grown elephants are much bigger than a full grown cat.
A full grown moose is about the same size as a horse, so it would be about 7-8 feet long.
When it reaches puberty
The average length of a full grown kookaburra is 46 cm.
That answer depends on the breed. For example the miniature horse is only 3 feet when full grown, but the Clydesdale cam be five feet or more when full grown
offsets
when a horse is full grown it is 5- 6 years old
Answer:A full-grown horse.
It varies from breed to breed. A healthy full grown horse (regardless of gender) can be anywhere from 800 to 2000 pounds, depending on breed, height, and the workload to feed ratio.
not that big!
They're about 16 hands tall when full grown.