Yes, both bull and cow moose are capable of killing or seriously wounding a horse. There have been many stories by cowboys that raise cattle and ranch up in northern Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia that have had run-ins with moose when on horse-back. One would think that a horse can out-run a moose, but this is not true. A moose can easily keep in stride, and even gain on a galloping horse. When in reach, a moose will rip that horse apart with its hooves to the point where it (the horse) gets so wounded that the cowhand has to put it down.
The only way a cowboy can save both his horse and himself is if he is able to shoot-down the moose before they have a chance to attack him or his steed. Otherwise, moose will just keep attacking until there's nothing left to attack.
It does not have a state horse. The Alaska State Land Mammal is the moose.
Moose typically inhabit boreal and mixed deciduous forests of the Northern Hemisphere in temperate to subarctic climates.
No, a horse and a moose are two different animals with distinct physical characteristics. While both may have four legs and a similar body shape, a horse typically has a sleeker build, longer legs, and a different head shape compared to a moose.
Moose typically inhabit boreal and mixed deciduous forests of the Northern Hemisphere in temperate to subarctic climates. Moose are solitary animals and so not form herds.
A horse or Zebra will have one whole hoof on each leg. Whilst a moose or deer will have two hooves as they are cloven hoofed animals.
A full grown moose is about the same size as a horse, so it would be about 7-8 feet long.
It looks like a moose or a horse
The Abercrombie & Fitch logo is not a horse. It is a moose. There is a story behind the reason that the moose is the logo. If you search on Google for "David Abercrombie" and "Ezra Fitch" you should be able to stumble upon the story behind the moose and why it's part of the Abercrombie & Fitch culture.
A pintabian is a mixed breed of horse. The mixed breeds are pinto and arabian.
moose geese mouse horse
No, this is a good soil to work a horse in.
Moose, elk, bear, deer, antelope, horse, cattle, sheep and human.