A colt is a male horse at 5yrs of age or younger so technically the horse is "grown up" meaning out of it's colt stage at 6yrs of age.
A filly is a young female horse, and will therefore gro up to be a mare. A foal or colt grows up to be a stallion/gelding.
You can buy one from the auctions or the private sales. Or you can breed a mare and hope that the foal turns out to be a colt that will grow up to be a stallion.
Its sad that you have no life and care this much about Farmville. Cityville is better.
Is called a colt. Or in some places in America (where they call foals "colts") a horse colt.
Yes, but not all colts mature at the same rate.
The group it travels with, usually consisting of a stallion, several mares and their young. Although, there are herds known as bachelor bands that are made up of colts taht have been forced from their original herd because they have become old enough to be a threat to the current dominant stallion.
A young stallion is commonly referred to as a "colt." Colts are male horses that are typically under four years of age before they reach maturity and can be called stallions. They are known for their playful and energetic behavior as they grow and develop.
The stallions recognise they're colts by there smell. Ocasinally a stallion won't recognise they're foal if it is a boy ( a stallion likes alot of mares in his herd so he doesn't care if they are girls) so the stallion will take the foal as an enemy stallion and fight the poor foal who will usally die and then be eaten by bears, Seriously!
No. A stallion is the term for a male horse that has not been castrated. Stallions, mares, fillies, colts are all terms used for both wild and domesticated horses.
A Foal is a young horse, a male foal is a colt and a female foal is a filly.
In a wild horse scenario, a band of horses (group) there is one lead stallion who is the father of all the foals. the head stallion figure is the only permanent male horse. (i said figure because the stallion can be taken over by another stallion. like a pride of lions). But there is always a varying number of males because the foals can be colts which when mature will be driven off like male lion cubs.
Depends if that foal is male or female. Colts, which are young male horses, grow up to either be stallions (if intact) or geldings (if castrated) when they reach adulthood. Fillies, which are young female horses, grow up to be mares when they reach adulthood.