Your horse may have 'Cushing's Syndrome' which is caused by a tumor in the pituitary gland. It may be worth it to treat it if it is caught early enough. Have your vet see your horse. It's treatable with medication but not curable.
There are no symptoms. It's actually quite natural for a heifer at that age to be loosing teeth, especially the front incisors, because she is shedding her baby teeth and growing in her adult teeth. It may be different if she's losing molars because she could have some sort of infection in the jaw that may need veterinary attention.
The age of a horse affects the speed of the horse because like a human with age the body has experienced wear, and does not repair itself as well.
The opposite of a female horse would be a male horse. A young male horse, under the age of four, is called a colt. An adult male horse, over the age of four, that has not been castrated is called a stallion or a stud. An adult male horse, over the age of four, that HAS been castrated is called a gelding.
Horses begin shedding their milk teeth at age two and have adult dentition by their 4 year old year.
A grown female horse is called a mare, a grown male horse is called a stallion, a foal is a colt (male) or filly (female)
at age 21
Go see your family doctor. There might be some underlying problem as to why you are losing your hair at such a young age.
16
botockz:)
You could be loosing hair for a lot of reasons, diet, hormones, medication, ect. You should talk to your doctor.
Do not work with it, so he will not age. When you get a Philosopher's Stone, probably through promos or exchanges, then you can add it to that horse, so he will live past the age of 25 without losing health.
Because as you get older you start losing your colors, like your skin color and stuff like that.
Because losing hair is very natural, when you were born your genes gave "instructions" for hair growth and such, and so it will not always grow back past a certain age.
the same age as any other horse
There are no symptoms. It's actually quite natural for a heifer at that age to be loosing teeth, especially the front incisors, because she is shedding her baby teeth and growing in her adult teeth. It may be different if she's losing molars because she could have some sort of infection in the jaw that may need veterinary attention.
If it is a young horse, they will lose baby teeth at about 2-3 years of age and the adult teeth will replace them. If it is an old horse, the teeth are much looser and the gums are not as strong, so an aging horse may start to lose teeth at anywhere from 15-30 years of age. In this case, a change of diet needs to be made. Feed your senior horse softer foods and grains that do not need a lot of chewing.
62 is the current age of the eldest horse to ever be, sadly the horse died at that age.