A black stallion is a horse, and like any other horse, its food needs will depend on its size and work level. Horses eat grass, and in the wild this is the only food they would readily eat. However, in winter, horses will eat hay, bran and chaff. If there is snow on the ground or little grass (or if the grass is dead in summer) they will need supplementary feeding on quality hay. Horses that are being worked will need concentrates to keep their energy up, such as oats, corn or commercial horse feed. The more time a horse spends under saddle (or pulling a plough, or on the lunge line, or working in any other way) the more concentrates it will need to stay in condition. Retired horses, foals and horses that are not under work often do not need concentrates.
A stallion is a male horse. Horses eat grasses like oats, wheat, or barley. They graze in open grass lands. Horses do not eat other animals, they are called herbivores.
Nine times out of ten, it would be a Clydesdale, because they are bred for pulling carts. Just because a horse is a stallion and it happens to be black, does not make it super strong!
I wish I knew
I believe the breed was an Arabian.
His Arabic name is Shaytan which means βdevilβ in arabic π€
not sure, but i think there are about maybe 20
If looking for specific horses, Cavelletti is a great website
Steven Farley has written: 'The Black Stallion and the shape-shifter' -- subject(s): Fiction, Horses, Supernatural, Juvenile fiction, OverDrive, Juvenile Fiction 'The homecoming' -- subject(s): Horses, Juvenile fiction, Fiction 'Young Black Stallion #6: Hard Lessons' 'Wild spirit' -- subject(s): Fiction, Horses, Horses in fiction, Christmas, Christmas in fiction, Florida in fiction, Juvenile fiction 'Blitz, Bd.13, Blitz, das schwarze Fohlen' 'The Homecoming (Young Black Stallion)' 'The black stallion's steeplechaser' -- subject(s): Horses, Juvenile fiction, Fiction 'The Black Stallion and the lost city' -- subject(s): Horses, Motion pictures, Production and direction, Greek Mythology, Juvenile fiction, Fiction 'The Yearling (Young Black Stallion, 5)'
Henry in the Black Stallion Books by Walter Farley is the short, stocky, balding old man who helps the main character Alec, a young red-haired man, tame and train several horses including the Black Stallion.
Horses generally do not migrate. Also a horses color does not in anyway affect it's behavior or habits. A stallion may travel to find a band of mares for himself, but his color will not affect this behavior.
mostly carrots, but i am sure they will eat sugar cubes and apples
The feminine form of stallion is mare. Stallions are male horses, while mares are female horses.
Black Stallion Mystery is the one i read 4th, its in al little set of 4 books, the black stallion, the black stallion returns, Satan and the black stallion, and finnaly the black stallion mystery
A black stallion is a horse, and like any other horse, its food needs will depend on its size and work level. Horses eat grass, and in the wild this is the only food they would readily eat. However, in winter, horses will eat hay, bran and chaff. If there is snow on the ground or little grass (or if the grass is dead in summer) they will need supplementary feeding on quality hay. Horses that are being worked will need concentrates to keep their energy up, such as oats, corn or commercial horse feed. The more time a horse spends under saddle (or pulling a plough, or on the lunge line, or working in any other way) the more concentrates it will need to stay in condition. Retired horses, foals and horses that are not under work often do not need concentrates.A stallion is a male horse. Horses eat grasses like oats, wheat, or barley. They graze in open grass lands. Horses do not eat other animals, they are called herbivores.
a male horse (an adult) a baby boy would be a colt
The scientific name for the domestic horse is Equus ferus caballus. This includes all breeds of horses, including the Black Stallion.
No. Black Beauty is about a horse found in the wild that keeps getting new homes. Black Stallion is about a boy who befriended a horse on a ship. And they were shipwreked on an island together. So they have similar names, and they're both about black horses. But they're different stories.
Well, stallions aren't always black, so all I can tell you about them is that they are often movie characters, like in the movie Black Beauty.