Look in the classified ads, or go to a horse auction. There are many horses that are not registered everywhere.
It is not difficult to find the history of your horse. But your horse must be registered to find it. If in fact your horse is registered, you can look up your horse's pedigree on the internet. But if you horse is not registered, I am sorry but I do not know how to help you.
A horse is considered double registered when it is registered with two different horse registries. Like for instance, say you have a palomino Quarter horse, you can register that horse with the American Quarter Horse Association and because of it's color you can also register it with the Palomino Horse Breeders Association, and it would then be double registered.
Unregistered horses or ponies are equines that haven't been registered to a breed. Horses that aren't registered sometimes aren't purebreds or the owner wasn't interested. Registering a horse is needed if you want to do good moneymaking breeding or showing.
If it is a registered race horse in Australia try this? my horse is an Irish race horse, but raced in Australia - and he was still on this website (linked in related links).
You find or purchase a horse call it a Trojan and if you love it enough it will be your best friend, thats at least what I think.
To find your registered Thoroughbred online by name, start by visiting the website of the Jockey Club, which maintains the official registry for Thoroughbreds in North America. Use their online search tool, often called the "Horse Search" or "Horse Registration" feature, and enter the horse's name in the search bar. This should provide you with the horse's pedigree information, registration details, and other relevant data. If the horse is registered in another country, check the respective national registry's website for similar search options.
If a horse is not registered with a breed registry they cannot show in registered shows for that breed and any offspring of that horse cannot be registered as a pure bred. They can probably still be registered as a half breed provided the other parent was registered. IE- If a purebred registered Arabian stallion was bred to an unregistered mare the foal can be registered as a half-Arabian no matter what the breed of the mare was or if she was even registered. Unregistered horses can still compete is open horse shows and shows which do not require a breed affiliation.
A purebred horse with the paper work that shows his ancestry.
A horse can can be able to get registered in a equestrian centre
Mustangs are registered with the BLM (breu of land management) horses that are registered have a freez brand on the side of their neck
at least 5000 thats alot
A registered quarter horse is a purebred.