It will take a few minutes for the horse to show up in your breeding farm after you have bought it. Otherwise, perhaps another player outbid you - you can look in your office to check.
every day in real life and on howrse HOWRSE ANSWER:every day JustinMorgan from howrse
for howrse daily
It must be cleaned daily.
Its presence protects the horse in the stall against any disease.
A Falabella on Howrse isA horse that u can buy at the secret market in the shop in an equestrian center!!The Falabella is a miniature horse considered as a pet in the game.It can be assigned to one of your stalls. Its presence protects the horse in the stall against any disease. P.S It costs passesSponsor me I'm Royle on Howrse!!! ;)
Yes, a horse's stall needs to be cleaned daily. The accumulation of urine can negatively affect a horse's respitory system. Urine and feces can also cause a buildup of bacteria in a horse's hooves and result in pain for the horse. A stall should be picked clean of wet spots and manure daily and the stall should be stripped and cleaned every couple of days. Oh My Goodness, YES YES YES!!!! If not cleaned regulary, the horse can get a hoof problems!! Remember, no hoof, no horse!!!!!
You don't need to put them in the same stall. The horse in the stall is pregnant, if it is not your horse in the stall, when the foal is born you will be offered to buy it.
For Howrse [Archimedes]: Wax
I mucked out the horse's stall.
Horses age on Howrse each day you log in to the game. Also, you can use aging points to age your horse by 2 months. If you want to use aging points, train your horse for the day and then put the horse to sleep either in the stall or the pasture. Then click the pyramid and it will tell you how many aging points you have. Use one and your horse will age 2 months and you can start your training over. You can age your horse as much as you want as long as you have the aging points.
Since this is a question posed on the computer game Howrse, the answer would be "all of these." In real life, though, a bored horse in a stall is a recipe for stall vices. Pacing, stomping, weaving, pawing, cribbing, wind sucking, teeth grinding, box walking, wall-kicking, self-mutilation, head-bobbing, are all nasty little habits that once started can be very difficult to stop. They can effect the health of the horse and can cause damage to the stall. A horse can also become aggressive, charging at a stall wall just to see if it can go through it, or biting out at other horses and its handlers.
You should clean a horse's stall once a day if your horse is in at night and goes out during the day. If this is the case you should clean your horse's stall after he goes out in the morning or before he comes in, in the afternoon. If your horse is kept in a stall 24/7 (which I do not reccomend) then clean the horse's stall at least three times a day. Once in the morning, once at noon and again at night. when cleaning your stabled horse's stall move him into a spare stall while you work so he is not in your way.