Storm, Sergeant, Thunder, Callico, Rubble, Rocky, Marbles, Granite.
The black stallion, the phantom stallion, wild horse island, misty of chincotegue
You don't build a horse so to speak, but you do breed it. This requires a stallion (Not a Gelding), a Mare, and a very good vet plus any possible stable hands etc.Unless you mean house, in which case watch grand designs.Hope that helps :)
Yes, be it for a gelding or mare. Of course what you want to name your horse is your decision.
If you get a good, non-stubborn Quarter Horse, then yes Quarter Horses are great to just ride around in. If your not going into compitions, get a slower Quarter Horse, also aging around 12-16. Gelding not stallion, I prefer mares. I have my own experience on Quarter Horses, I have 3 of them and I Barrel Race with my horse. And they are very gentle 'giants'! I recommend them.
Probably whisper or chucky. or maybe if its a mare or filly it could be nicked named Jackie. it kinda depends on the color but if its a stallion or a gelding or a colt maybe jacko or arty or maybe vesty
If the horse isn't breeding quality, or he isn't servicing mare, or has a reproductive or mannering problem, then gelding is probably a really good idea. It is called "the kindest cut" for a reason. I've had and known many stallions that once gelded became super family and kids horses. I've noticed Arabs that are gelded later in life seem to settle into being a gelding a bit easier that some of the tough customer Quarter horse and Paints did. All of them are a bit to a lot easier to handle (disposition means a lot!) that is really your call to make. even if you geld the guy he will still think he is a tough stallion, although he will calm down a little bit.
there is really no age limit if the stallion is in good shape and health
OMG yes it is one of the best horse series out there!!
I'm pretty certain that if the horse was allowed to express an opinion he'd say that it was bad.
a good name for a shetland pony is sheba which is from the Hebrew origin it means promise or oath.
As long as the dams of the stallion's offspring are unrelated to the sire and he is a good example of the breed with no autosomal genetic defects: nothing. There are many examples of breeders that have inbred horses using this technique and produced outstanding individuals. That being said, a breeder must know the genetics of his/her bloodstock very well before attempting inbreeding techniques at this level.