yes
In the wild, pregant mares live out in pasture all through their pregnancy. Domestic mares aren't as different from the wild ones as some people think. A mare can stay out to pasture all throughout her pregnancy. They SHOULD be out in the pasture all throughout their pregnancy, or at least have to option of being inside or outside. Most will choose outside.
It is varied. They can stay in barns, sheds, pastures, or just an area that is fenced in.
Mares typically stay pregnant for 11 months, but may give birth up to a month early or late.
A foal is usually only called a foal for a year. Then they are called yearlings.
Some do and some don't depending on rate of maturity. Many mares that are not ready to breed will come in to heat once a season and produce a persistent follicle (one that doesn't ovulate). They may stay in a prolonged heat or may not cycle.
Sheep are kept in a variety of places, mainly on farms. They can be kept as pets in a small pen, although there is normally only 2 or 3, while mobs/flocks of mainly up to about 300 sheep can be kept in large paddocks.
PMU (pregnant mares' urine) What happens to PMU mares?For approximately six months from fall through spring, the pregnant mares live in the "pee barns," forced to stand in stalls with urine collection devices strapped to them. The stalls are deliberately narrow to prevent pregnant mares from turning around and detaching the collection cups. In the last month of their eleven-month pregnancy, the mares are put out to pasture to have their foals. The mares are put in a herd with a stallion, so they quickly become pregnant again. In September, their foals are taken away from them to be sold, whether or not they are fully weaned. The next month, they're back in the barns and the cycle starts again. The organization that represents the interests of the PMU ranchers, the North American Equine Ranching Information Council (NAERIC ), considers it "a testament to her health and strength" if a mare can have a foal each year for 20 years. Currently, approximately 7,000 PMU mares live on 73 contracted ranches in Manitoba, Canada. The minimum stall width specified in the regulations­ -- even for the largest draft breeds so commonly used -- is a mere five feet. A typical PMU ranch consists of a small family and one hired ranch hand responsible for feeding, cleaning and exercising nearly 100 pregnant mares at a time. All the mares stay in a rectangle stal from there chess to there rear end and or flanks
A foal will sleep wherever it's mother is whether that be in the stable or pasture. It will stay with it's mother until it can eat on it's own and is weaned away from her.
Stay the Same - album - was created on 1999-03-16.
Nomadic herders are limited to where they can graze their animals, and cannot manage pastures because there really is no such thing as a pasture. When the grass is not there, they have to move on; they can't stay in one place.
the angles stay the same but the lenght of the sides change.
A horse typically stays in a barn or stable, where it can have shelter, food, water, and protection from the weather. Horses also need access to a pasture or paddock for exercise and grazing.