Yes you put your mums fat, flabby fannyy on it and she jizzes on it :D
the bite generally won't show at all or will only appear as a small spot of blood on your horse, however with blowfly and sandfly bites the bites will appear as a much larger lump which may need to be treated.
Yes but, they do not bite unless you mess with them!! so don't mess with them!
There are quite a few flies that suck blood: The horse fly and deer fly use their sharp mandibles to bite and suck the blood of their victims. Both look like normal houseflies, albeit without the long proboscis (the tube-mouth that most flies have.) Both flies are usually yellow-brown or black, and often have bright-green eyes. They generally suck the blood of livestock and mammals. Often, the bite from a horse fly can really hurt, so it's best to avoid them. The stable fly also looks like a housefly (much more so than the horse or deer fly), but it's proboscis is longer and more rigid, like a mosquito's. They usually attack in early morn or late afternoon, and usually go for the ankles. As with the horse fly, stable flies often feed off of livestock. Black flies, or "buffalo gnats", are large flies with a kind of hunchbacked appearance. They are often found near rivers. The bite from black flies often causes itching, swelling and other allergic reactions; some have even died from either allergies or blood loss caused by a black fly bite. Sandflies and biting midges, while technically midges and not flies, are often considered to be such by the general population. They are small insects that are often found around beaches at night (thus the name), and often attack the ankles. Sandflies can leave a nasty rash.
I don't rly know but I'm thinking that they r kinda dangerous cuz they can really hurt if they bite u and they r rly big!
Horse flies can transmit diseases to horses through their bites, causing potential health issues such as skin irritations, allergic reactions, and blood loss. It is essential to take preventive measures, such as using repellents or fly sheets, to reduce the risk of sickness in horses caused by horse flies.
It depends how it is treated in the series of homes it is sent to. A badly treated horse will bite, kick etc. , whereas a well treated horse will be a good companion.
You will know that a fly has been annoying a horse if you see him scratching himself. Buy a bottle of fly spray or put on a fly rug and that should sort em out!
Very, although they don't seem to bite humans all that often.
A horse fly bite looks like a large raised reddish bruise. or a small tomato without the green bit on top
Horse flies do. Nasty little boogers they are!
Swollen, red, welp like area on the skin. May or may not itch.
it is just like a mosguito bite. its no big deal. oh and i do not know how to spell that ^ actually i think it hurts a heck of a lot more than a mosquito bite it stings more
Horses don't get fleas. Horse FLY? Big itchy painful bump, like a mosquito bite x 20.
The same fly if allowed will bite numerous times. If I see one of these on one of my horses I do my best to kill it. Then I will spray some extra fly spray on the horse in case the fly brought friends. I have been bitten by horseflies several times and they are painful. Almost like a bee sting, so I do what I can to prevent them.
Some people don't think there is a difference between a fly and mosquito, but there is. There are such things as a House fly and a Horse fly. The House fly is usually what you would see flying around the house or some where close to food. The Horse fly and Mosquito are the some what similar though. Mosquito's bite you because they feed on blood from humans and other mammals. A Horse fly bites you for about the same reason but are faster at biting you than a mosquito.
the bite generally won't show at all or will only appear as a small spot of blood on your horse, however with blowfly and sandfly bites the bites will appear as a much larger lump which may need to be treated.
A horse fly