They fly horses on cargo planes that are equipped for equine transport. Such things do exist--horse racing is big in the United Arab Emirates, and some of the owners will buy horses in Kentucky. To get a horse on a plane, they get the truck from the airport food service operation and put the horse in it. They drive the horse out to the plane, raise the truck up to the plane and walk the horse in.
most horses probably travel in style to the olympics: in airplanes made for them, or in horse trailers
Before airplanes, there were cars, trucks, horses, and trains, those were the main ways of transportation.
Automobiles, trains, bicycles, horses, ships, and walking. There were airplanes but no passenger service was available.
Horses that are placed on Airplanes are preloaded into a large metal stall and then slid into a compartment designed to carry them. They remain in the stall until they arrive at their destination. If the horse becomes upset then it would be tranquilized.
No, horses cannot fly on commercial airplanes due to space, weight, and safety constraints. Instead, they are typically transported by specialized horse transport vehicles or by air cargo planes equipped with spacious stalls for horses.
WWI- Horses & carriages, motorcycles, cars & trucks, tanks, airplanes, ships WWII- Motorcycles, cars & trucks-I believe the Jeep was first used in WWII, "half-tracks" tanks, airplanes, ships, submarines
Trains, cars, boats, horses, & airplanes. Basically the same as today except on a much smaller scale.
We would have a lot of horses and carriages around. Civilization wouldn't have expanded as fast and railroads and airplanes would be the main form of long distance travels.
Yes, jets really are airplanes but they are faster airplanes.
All gliders are airplanes, but not all airplanes are gliders.
airplanes are cool
Delaware has seafood and also some farming.