enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Studbook selection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Studbook_selection

    Mare performance tests (German: Stutenleistungsprüfung) are often open to geldings, as well. By comparing mother-daughter scores, patterns in the traits that stallions pass on can be calculated. A performance test for mares or geldings is either a one-day "Field Test" or 2- to 5-week "Station Test".

  3. Gelding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gelding

    A 3-year-old gelding. A gelding is a castrated male horse or other equine, such as a pony, donkey or a mule. The term is also used with certain other animals and livestock, such as domesticated camels. [1] By comparison, the equivalent term for castrated male cattle would be steer (or bullock), and wether for sheep and goats.

  4. Stallion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stallion

    [12] [13] [14] New Forest stallions, when not in their breeding work, take part on the annual round-ups, working alongside mares and geldings, and compete successfully in many disciplines. [15] [16] There are drawbacks to natural management, however. One is that the breeding date, and hence foaling date, of any given mare will be uncertain.

  5. Oldenburger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oldenburger

    The breed was built on a mare base of all-purpose farm and carriage horses, today called the Alt-Oldenburger. The modern Oldenburg is managed by the Association of Breeders of the Oldenburger Horse , which enacts strict selection of breeding stock to ensure that each generation is better than the last.

  6. A leading expert on ultra-processed food says his kids still ...

    www.aol.com/world-leading-ultra-processed-food...

    What we know — and don't know — about ultra-processed foods Six years ago, Hall was the first to definitively show that ultra-processed foods can lead people to eat more food (about 500 ...

  7. Horse behavior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_behavior

    Free-roaming mustangs (Utah, 2005). Horse behavior is best understood from the view that horses are prey animals with a well-developed fight-or-flight response.Their first reaction to a threat is often to flee, although sometimes they stand their ground and defend themselves or their offspring in cases where flight is untenable, such as when a foal would be threatened.

  8. Foal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foal

    When a mare is pregnant, she is said to be "in foal". When the mare gives birth, she is "foaling", and the impending birth is usually stated as "to foal". A newborn horse is "foaled". After a horse is one year old, it is no longer a foal, and is a "yearling". There are no special age-related terms for young horses older than yearlings.

  9. Mare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mare

    A broodmare. Note slight distension of belly, indicating either early pregnancy or recent foaling. A mare is an adult female horse or other equine. [1] In most cases, a mare is a female horse over the age of three, and a filly is a female horse three and younger.