45 Comments - Last post 52 minutes ago by BargainSeeker
4 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by FritoleXx
31 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by drbeckett
233 Comments - Last post 2 hours ago by medion
16,665 Comments - Last post 3 hours ago by Channel28
7 Comments - Last post 7 hours ago by Axelflox
31 Comments - Last post 7 hours ago by Axelflox
68 Comments - Last post 4 minutes ago by moonlightdriver
9,873 Comments - Last post 23 minutes ago by ba2
171 Comments - Last post 26 minutes ago by BerkutS
45 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by LittleBibo1
17,375 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by Belmasv
25 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by adam1224
1,576 Comments - Last post 2 hours ago by Vasharal
During the Industrial Revolution, ponies were called ‘pit ponies’, as they were used to haul coal.
Ponies and horses have two blind spots where they cannot see. One blind spot is behind them and if they sense someone or something behind them, they will give a powerful kick.
In the wild, ponies often live in harsh, bleak areas such as moors and fields, where they are able to survive with little food.
All members of the horse family have just one toe (a hoof) on each foot. For this reason they are often called ‘odd-toed animals’.
A baby horse of one year or younger is called a foal.
About an hour after a foal is born, it can stand up, and within a few hours it is able to trot along by its mother.
A scientific name for a horse is 'Equus ferus caballus'.
Copied from here
Comment has been collapsed.