- photo contests ▼
- photoshop contests ▼
- Tutorials ▼
- Social ▼Contact options
- Stats ▼Results and stats
- More ▼
- Help ▼Help and rules
- Login
Howdie stranger!
If you want to participate in our photoshop and photography contests, just:
LOGIN HERE or REGISTER FOR FREE
*headdesk* I’ve been a horse person for 7 years now…
It’s not a black horse with blond hair! It’s a silver dapple. Also, I have photos in my own collection that are better quality than this, mind if I post them?
Also, the white horse is rearing, the horses with the bells around their necks are not wild, the one that you titled “Black Stallion Gallop Horse” is a horse rearing, and the “Arabian brown horse” is a chestnut.
A decent collection, but not the best. Sorry.
To: HorseLover
The so called “black horse with blonde hair” that you call a silver dapple, i thought it was a black flaxen. Flaxen, as in, eg. a bay horse with blonde hair, or a chestnut with blonde hair, or black in this case.
( 2 years and 3215 days ago )To Horselover and headdesk:
Most of these horses are feral populations are not true wild horses, as this term is used to describe horses that have never been domesticated, such as the endangered Przewalski’s horse, a separate subspecies, and the only remaining true wild horse. There is an extensive, specialized vocabulary used to describe equine-related concepts, covering everything from anatomy to life stages, size, colors, markings, breeds, locomotion, and behavior.
Horselover:
The definition of an a-hole is:
An opening at the opposite end of an animal’s digestive tract from the mouth. Its function is to control the expulsion of feces, unwanted semi-solid matter produced during digestion, which, depending on the type of animal, may include: matter which the animal cannot digest, such as bones;[1] food material after all the nutrients have been extracted, for example cellulose or lignin; ingested matter which would be toxic if it remained in the digestive tract; and dead or excess gut bacteria and other endosymbionts, and Horselover.
( 2 years and 3148 days ago )
Thank you for collection.
( 2 years and 3664 days ago )