feathers are the little hairs behind the fetlock. they are on all the legs, and are more visible on heavier horses, like draft horses (Frisians, Percherons, Clydesdales).
The phrase about horses is actually, "That is a horse of a different color," not feather. The feather animal phrase is, "That is a bird of a different feather." The horse of a different color was in the movie, "The Wizard of Oz:" and the phrase means some kind of unrelated or incidentally related matter with a distinctly different significance.
When you remove a feather off a Pegasus the horse is no longer a Pegasus, it is just a normal horse.
Hi, I'm pretty sure its a kangaroo feather. I got that from the internet.
If you have a pegasus, go to its page. On the bottom right corner, there's a little green tag saying 'actions'. Underneath, it says 'remove a feather'. However, If you remove a feather, your pegasus will lose its wings, so think carefully.
The horse is called Pirate, the one Madame Adeline rides.
The reason why Indians put feathers in the horse's mane was to show that theirs was a war horse. The feather was used to symbolize this.
many breeds of horse and pony's have feathered legs. friesians, Shires, Clydesdale, Fells, Dales, the Gypsy breeds and several others.
The maccaroni
Curry comb or hard brush.
After washing down a shire horse, the owner or groom hand will use wood flour to dry the feather on it's legs quickly, in preparation for a show.
It's typically a malapropism that is used to add a wry wrinkle to the speaker's overt disinclination to use either of the clichéd metaphors "horse of a different color" or "bird of a different feather." Also technically a catachresis used either wittingly or not to convey the speaker's opinion that something doesn't quite fit the norm of an object of its type.
Is a feather solid