A saw horse.
A sawhorse.
It's not about what kind of horse you get, but how experienced the horse is. If you're not a beginner, but you've never had a horse before, your best chances of keeping one for a long enough time would be to get a well trained horse that's laid back, but will willingly work for you.
That is my daughter, and I really never hurt the horse. She is just kind of soft about that stuff.
The kind with a rip -top, as in pet food cans
Yes, stallions are grown male horses, ponies a kind of horse that never grow to the size of a full grown horse
probably some kind of Stock Horse or Quarter Horse.
Horse liniment is a type of 'lotion' you rub on your horses legs and body to relax it's muscles after a hard workout, or if the horse is older and needs it for his muscles. It's kind of like Icy Hot for horses :)
A pinto is a kind of horse and a kind of bean.shint
Horse keeping in any area of NYC is fairly expensive and you'll likely spend in excess of $10,000 a year per horse, this does not include cost for special shoeing needs, or any kind of showing expenses, lessons, or a trainer. This is just basic board and basic needs of the horse.
As far as I know a palomino is a colour - particularly in certain breeds. A palomino horse is just like a bay or a grey horse. Particular diets are made if the horse needs extra feeding/ concentrates/ supplements etc. And that depends on the amount of work and what the work is, the overall health (if there are any deficiencies) and what improvements need to be made - such as if the horse needs extra fat or digestible energyin its diet.Unless you are talking about a particular 'palomino' breed which needs specific nutrition (and even so the horse wouldn't be on a 'diet') there is no specific 'diet' for a 'palomino horse'.
this depends on how much the horse weighs and what kind of work it's doing. A horse needs 1.5% to3.0% of it's body weight in food daily. That would be roughly 15 to 30 pounds of food for a 1,000 pound horse.
a black horse