no
In nature a foal stays with it's mother until 6 months to one year of age, depending on the sex. Domestic horses however typically have their foals weaned from them at between 4 and 6 months of age.
horses hold there foal for 11 months.
On the game, the foal stays with it's mother until it is 6 months old. You can sell the horse before 6 months though. The horse will never go to its dad, it will stay with the mother always unless you sell it.
Most foals are weaned at 6-7 months of age.Weaning is a very long process...you have to separate the mother and the foal for about 6 months and stop feeding mare and foal feed to the mother.
It is still called a foal. Sucking foal.
The mother of a foal is called a dam.
The mare is the mother and the foal is the baby. Until the foal is self-sufficient, the mother will be quite protective and caring.
it stays with its mother until it grownup .
The fathers job is to protect the foal and the Dam as the mother raises the foal
do you mean the foal or the dam? usually the foal would try to stand up, snapping the imbilicall cord, leaving the foal non-attached to his/her mother. the mother would then lick her foal dry
Mare
foal