Yes. Rendering plants take waste fat and bone from grocery stores, scraps from restaurants, and dead animals. They cook the meat and fat products together and grind it up. It's becomes animal feed and soap, lubricants, and glue that's used to glue furniture.
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∙ 16y agoWiki User
∙ 11y agoMany years ago, when horses were not able to work, they were 'rendered' and some parts like hooves and ligaments went into a boiling process to make glue. This is still done in a very limited way so some furniture restorers can use appropriate glue for old pieces of furniture.
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∙ 12y agoLOL no. Glue is made from horses, not the other way around.
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∙ 13y agoI think you mean is glue made from horse hooves. It used to be but I think there are better ways to make adhesives now.
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∙ 13y agoYes sadly it does but way back when they used horses more often to make glue then now a days.
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∙ 13y agoNo. Animal hooves have not been used for adhesives for quite some time now. There are superior products that don't involve killing an animal, making them more politically correct.
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∙ 12y agoNo WAY! Horses can now be made into DOG FOOD :'(
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∙ 12y agono.
I was about 8 when I started riding horses and am still hooked.
Brands like Ivory and Yardley have used horse-based ingredients like tallow (fat from horses) in the past, but most modern soap brands no longer use horse-derived ingredients due to ethical and sustainability concerns. It is unlikely to find soap made from horses in current products on the market.
Yes they can. Horses can be ridden until any age aslong as they are fit and healthy and in good condition, although some horses start to lack stamina and energy as they get older. Horses and ponies over 20 would need lighter work than say a 10 year old.
No, a twelve-year-old horse is not too old. Horses can live well into their 20s and even 30s with proper care and management. A twelve-year-old horse is typically still considered to be in its prime years for performance and riding.
No, in Howrse.com, horses do not die of old age. The game does not feature natural death for horses.
Old horses are often slaughtered when they are no longer useful. Glue factories use parts like horse hoofs to make glue. So this phrase came to mean that someone was no longer useful and was gotten rid of.
Whatever tasks they were trained to do, from pulling carts, carrying riders to performing in circuses.
The idiom "sent to the glue factory" is a metaphorical way of saying that someone or something has been discarded or disposed of in a harsh or cruel manner, usually due to being no longer useful or valuable. It is often used to describe a situation where a person or thing has been replaced or rendered obsolete.
carring coal in mines, ploughing etc. but some horses still plough now
I was about 8 when I started riding horses and am still hooked.
avery permanent glue stick is 4 1/2 cementers
you have to put more glue on it, it will glue itself to the old glue, and be easier to remove
She had the opportunity to retire and raise horses, but her singing career did not make as much revenue as she had hoped. By 2017, age 38, with a 3 year old son, she is still Wrestling.
She had the opportunity to retire and raise horses, but her singing career did not make as much revenue as she had hoped. By 2017, age 38, with a 3 year old son, she is still wrestling.
Yes, Arabian horses are still maintained and bred in Arabia. Just like in old times, very close lineal records are kept and there is a high emphasis on placed on purity of their horses.
Good old-fashioned Elmer's glue is white.
spunk