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DAMSIRE Also known as the broodmare sire – the sire of the dam of a horse, or maternal grandsire. DISTAFF The female or dam's side of the pedigree. ENTIRE Male horse over three years old which has not been castrated, also known as a stallion.
A broodmare is a mare used for breeding.
A male horse is a stallion; during the conception and breeding process, he is called the sire.
Most yearlings and two-year-olds can and will breed under good circumstances. There's probably not a horse practice without a firsthand story of the pregnant filly that was only with a colt until a year of age. So for sure, many fairly young colts can be fertile.
A stallion used for breeding is known as a stud.
Sire and dam: A sire is a horse's father, a dam its mother. To produce and to sire: A mare produces foals; stallions sire foals; stallions do not produce foals.
Stallions will typically remain fertile beyond their 20th year of age. The age that stallions stop producing spermatozoa will vary between stallions. It is important that semen is routinely evaluated on all stallions, especially when using older stallions because of the expected decrease of semen production with age.
A STALLION SERvICE REPORT must be filed prior to midnight, january 15 of the following year by the recorded owner or recorded lessee at the time of exposure or use of a registered stallion that was exposed to or whose semen was used to inseminate a registered mare anytime during the preceding twelve (12) consecutive ...
In horse racing, a chute is an extended path increasing the length of a straight portion of a racecourse, particularly an oval-shaped one, allowing races of a specified distance to start at a location other than on one of the turns.