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.
A filly is a young female horse or pony a colt is a young male horse a mare is a grown up female horse a stallion is a male horse that hasn't been gelded a gelding is a male horse that has been gelded
A grown-up filly is called a mare.
foal- it could be colt(male) or filly(female), then mare if its a female when it grows up and stallion if its a male when it grows up. if the stallion is castrated it becomes a gelding.
No. Stallion, gelding, and colt are terms for male horses. A stallion is a male horse that can be used for breeding or, standing at stud. A gelding is a male horse that has been neutered. A colt is a male horse (stallion) that's newborn up to 2 or 3 years of age. Mare and filly are terms for female horses. A mare is a female horse that has given birth at least once. A filly is a female horse, usually young, that has never given birth.
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.
Yes you can do that but most likely the mare that will be out there with him will end up being pregnant!!
Newborn to four years old is a filly, five and up is a mare.
Mare IS the correct English word for a female horse. A young mare - up to about 2 years old - is referred to as a filly. A male horse is a stallion. A young male horse is a colt. A male horse that has been castrated is a gelding.
This depends on the DNA characteristics. If your mare or the stallion is homogeyous for a colour or pattern, then that will likely show up in the foal.
Lead Mare Lead Stallion Mare *3 at least* Stallion *4 at least* Foals *1 at least* That's all I know sorry I am looking up the same thing and that is all I know :)
A adult female is a mare, a filly is a female horse up to the age of 4 yrs. A gelding is a male horse that has been castrated and no longer capable of breeding.
It could! Breeding really needs to be supervised. The stallion could enter the wrong way and that alone could kill your mare. Also be very sure she is pregnant, it's odd that your stallion would get so worked up over a mare that should be pregnant.