20 interesting horse and pony facts just for you
- Horses are known as obligate nasal breathers. This means they breathe through their nostrils and cannot breathe through their mouths.
- If a horse has a ribbon on its tail – it means something! Red – I kick, Green – inexperienced, Blue – I’m a stallion and White – for sale.
- Horses are social animal and will get lonely if left on their own, they are known to mourn companions that have passed.
- When horses look like they’re ‘laughing’, they are engaging in a technique known as ‘flehmen’ a nose-enhancing technique that allows them to determine if a smell is good or bad.
- Horses cannot vomit.
- The first horse that was cloned was in Italy during 2003.
- Horses have the largest eyes of animal mammal on the planet.
- A horse in the 19th century is reported to have lived 62 years – he is said to have been called ‘Old Billy’.
- Horses can see nearly 360 degrees at any one times due to their eyes being on the side of their heads.
- Vocalisations are highly important to horses, they whinny and neigh when meeting or saying goodbye, stallions will emit loud roars as a mating call, and all horses will perform snorts to alert others around them to potential threats.
- Horses will not all lie down at the same time, at least one horse will stand standing to act as a look-out for potential danger.
- The height of a horse is measured in a unit known as ‘hands’, one hand is 4 inches. The tallest horse recorded was a shire horse named Sampson and came in at a staggering 21.2 hands, that’s an amazing 7 feet and 2 inches! Sampson was born in England in Toddington Mills during 1846.
- Horses with pink skin have potential for getting sunburn.
- It can take up to a year to re-grow a horse’s hoof.
- Horses like sweet flavours and are extremely likely to turn their heads away from anything bitter or sour.
- You can tell a horse is cold by feeling behind their ears – if the horse is cold, that area will be too.
- Racehorses can reach speeds of up to 41 mph when galloping!
- Horses lock their legs to avoid collapsing when sleeping standing up.
- The only remaining wild horse species lives in Mongolia.
- Horses are not colour-blind, though at one time we did think they were. They can see yellows and greens more vividly than violets and purples.
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