Yes
To breed two of your horses on Howrse.com there is two ways. Go down to the reproduction tab and click private covering. Then type in your own username where it says breeder's name and pick one of your horses. The other way is to go to the one that says 'cover one of your horses and click that then choose the horse you want :) I know that when i started howrse i was really confused because i wanted to breed my OWN horses not using the public way and i found out the first way first then found the other one. Hope this helps! XD
I have all ready looked it up now. It says that she owns 14 horses...... (I think this is true because it says so here:)How_many_horses_does_Zara_Phillips_ownWOW SHE HAS LOTS OF HORSES!
To breed horses on facebooks horse acadamy you have to level your horse to level 5 and have a spare stable once this is done you select the heart shaped symbol on the bottom right of the screen and find it, it says breed and then you select another level 5 stallion of yours or a friends and breed them you should then be able to name it and it will be born in 12 ish hours
Ypu can see how old your horse is by clicking on it and scrolling down where it says horse characteristics and breed, and across from that it should say your horses age.
with a gapple or garrot in your hand give each of the parent horses one then the "magic" happens
Find your horses breed then go to the town hall look at the comunity sign then you read it then click on each one, then scroll down on each one and find your breed then see how much it is to got there then write down his or her name of the horses owner. Then you go to the routes then type in his or her name. Then click travel. Click on the welcome sign and click the one that says something about breeding. Before you do this you have to think if you want to have a fee. then you click the horse that is the same breed but different gender. Then you click select and now your horse is pregnant.
A text message that says 'OK' is usually a reply to a message you have previously sent.
Yes, unless it says not, Breyer horses are plastic.
Like all animals, they have their own personality, but in general they are very sweet. Answer2: Tennessee walkers have always been bred to be very willing and sweet tempered horses. Walkers are some of the most even tempered horses as far as purebreds go. However there are those within the breed that fall outside the norm (just like with any breed). Remember all horses are individuals and may not understand that the breed standard says that they're supposed to be sweet and willing.
because the message was no sent.
There isn't a set limit, it just says you need "a lot of reindeer"
It is not specified what breed he is, but it says that he is a tabby. A tabby is not a breed.