Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Walter Farley (born Walter Lorimer Farley, 26 June 1915 – 16 October 1989) [1] was an American author, primarily of horse stories for children.His first and most famous work was The Black Stallion (1941), [2] the success of which led to many sequels over decades; the series has been continued since his death by his son Steven.
The Black Stallion in Adventures of the Black Stallion; Blue Jeans, Miley Stewart's horse in Hannah Montana; Buck, the buckskin horse of Ben Cartwright on the TV series Bonanza; Buck, the buckskin horse ridden by Trampas in the TV series The Virginian; Champion the Wonder Horse, the eponymous hero of a 1950s television series
Black Storm: A Horse of the Kansas Hills, (1929) Tornado Boy, (1930) Shag: The Story of a Dog, (1931) Silver: The Story of a Wild Horse, (1934) King: The Story of a Sheep Dog, (1936) Old Nick and Bob: Two Dogs of the West, William Morrow and Company, (1941) Tomahawk, Fighting Horse of the Old West, (1944) Buckskin, The Story of a Gallant Horse ...
The horse has a tan or gold colored coat with black points (mane, tail, and lower legs). Buckskin occurs as a result of the cream dilution gene acting on a bay horse. Therefore, a buckskin has the Extension, or "black base coat" (E) gene, the agouti gene (A) gene (see bay for more on the agouti gene), which restricts the black base coat to the ...
The Black Stallion Revolts (1953) - When his restless black stallion revolts against the routine and schedule of stable life, becoming a potential killer, a plane crash thwarts Alec's plans to give the Black free run in the desert, and bringing danger to both boy and horse. The Black Stallion's Sulky Colt (1954) - Bonfire and Tom are injured in ...
Her sire was the chestnut pinto stallion Pied Piper, and her dam was the smoky black pinto mare Phantom. Both of her parents were Chincoteague ponies. Misty grew to be a 12 hands (48 inches, 122 cm) palomino pinto with a marking on her left side, resembling a map of the United States, and a blaze shaped like the state of Virginia.
Image credits: _macsmission The very first shelter for abandoned animals—mostly horses, by the way—was opened on April 14, 1869 in the town of Bensalem, near Philadelphia. Its founder ...
El Mokhtar (February 9, 1971 – December 31, 1983) was an Arabian horse, and one of three black Arabian stallions used to portray "The Black" in the second Black Stallion film, The Black Stallion Returns. El Mokhtar was imported by a syndicate of American Arabian breeders in 1975.