You can ride one anytime when it comes across your path!
If registered yes, a TB/QH cross is called an Appendix Quarter Horse. They have their own association.
The horse DOES NOT have an appendix. The equivalent organ in a horse is the CECUM, which serves as a fermentation vat for fiber in the digestive tract. As in humans, the cecum is part of the large intestine. Unlike the appendix, which is an appendage that can be removed (and is necessarily removed when infected), the cecum is an essential part of the horse's digestive tract.
A Quarter horse and Thoroughbred cross is called an Appendix horse. The value of such a horse is dependant upon many factors, age, height, sex, color, breed, pedigree, show/race records, and the current local economy, and whether the horse is registered or not. There is no one set price for a horse.
a stanardbred or thoroughbred mix would make a nice fast horse.
Any horse with strong legs would work out well. A Thoroughbred or Welsh Cob are good. You could also use a Arab, Morgan, or a mix of both and that would be a Morab. One more would be a Quarter Horse. They are all very great horses for Show Jumping.
Yes there is. A pony is shorter than a horse and is somtimes mistaken for a child horse. That and MANY other reasons is why there is no difference between a quarter horse and a quarter pony. Look it up. It's not rocket science.
It is a Quarter Horse Walking Horse mix....or in other words just a grade horse.
two times a day on lucern and cool mix
Yes. Bred together to make a mix of breeds.
I think you may be confusing the term "pony" with the term for a baby horse which is a "foal". A pony is actually an entirely different subspecies of equine that is typically smaller than a horse. The gestation length for a horse is 11months, so mathematically a horse can give birth once a year after they have reached puberty which is around 2 years old. They usually are too old to carry a foal when they have reached the age of 20. So, mathematically a horse could have around 18 foals during her lifetime. However, most mares that are used only for breeding have around 10 - 15 foals during their life.
Thoroughbred horses are found on farms throughout Kentucky. There are also found in every state in the United States and in other countries. They live wherever an owner who loves thoroughbred horses lives.
thoroughbred andarabian