A foal is the name for a baby horse of any gender, and you can specify it by saying filly, which is a female horse younger than 4 or 5, or a colt, a male horse younger than 4 or 5.
Yes, a yearling can be away from it's mother(or dam). The usual weaning time for a foal is when they are 4-6 months old.
In nature a foal stays with it's mother until 6 months to one year of age, depending on the sex. Domestic horses however typically have their foals weaned from them at between 4 and 6 months of age.
A filly, until they are 4. Any baby horse is called a foal. A female foal is a Filly. A male foal is a Colt.
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No US states have a capital with only 4 letters; they all have 5 letters or more.
Peru is a South American country with a name that is 4 letters long.
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The foal's mother is called its dam and its father is its sire. Although an adult male horse in general is called a stallion. The mother is still a mare. If she was under four years old before she gave birth, she will now be called a mare even though she is still young enough to be considered a filly. During her pregnancy she is said to be 'in foal' and after the foal is born she is nursing or has a foal at foot. A mare that is constantly used for breeding (usually covered again on her first heat after foaling) is called a broodmare. She'll revert to simply being called a mare however after the lead stallion chases off the colts (the male foals at age 4) and the fillies when they're at a particular age.
A plate that has four letters is HOME plate.
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