Horses don't generally have thick coats. They are short in the summer, but thicker and fluffier in the winter :)
People don't 'hide' their horses. They may take them inside a stable for a while each day/ night, but they don't hide them.
Not sensitive to other's opinions.
Horses, like many mammals, shed throughout the year to accommodate the seasons. Horses coats naturally grow to be thick enough to keep them warm in winter and thin out again for spring. They are as thick as they need to be.
Because they can get in there and hide. Prey can't get to them as easily.
before horses indians used spears and bow and arrows with skins to hide their scent
During the day, quokkas hide in thick vegetation, such as scrubby thickets and areas of dense grass. On parts of the mainland, where quokkas have a very minimal population, they nest in thick cover around swampy areas.
Yes, raw peanuts should never be fed to horses as they can contain a fungus that is toxic to horses. Peanut butter that has been roasted or cooked can be given to horses to hide medications.
You play Howrse, don't you? Fat horses, with thick coats.
Mostly the ground in thick bushes to hide their nest easier
They don't really. All they can do is hide and hope for the best.
the best cold weather horses are the ones with thick fur. If its a sort ride then any horse but Arabians
Yes. Wombats have thicker hide on their backside, which they present to predators when hiding in a burrow. The predator has nothing to grasp hold of: there is no tail, and nor can it get its teeth into the thick hide, so the wombat remains safely ensconced in its burrow.