A horses color has no bearing on it's physical abilities. Strength will depend on the horses conformation , training , and willingness.
Since skewbald is a color and not a breed, it can be any height. So it depends on the breed of the horse.
Yes you can they are often skewbald with a black and White main
The terms skewbald and piebald are not really used anymore. They were ways of describing pinto color patterns. But the breeds that allow and promote color are APHA (Paints), AQHA (Quarter Horses), Pinto registry, Spotted Walking Horse, Spotted American Saddle Horse.
Usually Skewbald. But horses of that colour can also be called pinto. Skewbald means brown and white patches and pinto just refers to any horse with colour and white patches. Paint horses are actually a breed of horse that usually come in that colouring.
A skewbald horse is one that has patches of colour, but this colour cannot be black.
Piebald is black splotches, skewbald is brown splotches.
A piebald horse is a horse with irregular black patches on a gray coat (which may appear white). There are two other colorings to distinguish a piebald from: Paint horses and Skewbald. A Skewbald horse has similar patches, but they are brown. A Paint horse is the opposite - they seem to have white patches on a solid coat.
A skewbald horse is brown and white, and a piebald is black and white.
i have looked in a horse book and i found that there is 9 colours of horse or pony black bay brown chesnut grey dun palomino skewbald roan i have looked in a horse book and i found that there is 9 colours of horse or pony black bay brown chesnut grey dun palomino skewbald roan
Skewbald is a specific pattern of colored and white patches on a Paint or Pinto horse.
Oh, dude, skewbald is totally acceptable in the Gypsy Vanner breed. It's like their signature look or something. So, if you're into horses with that funky patchy coat, go check out some Gypsy Vanners. They're like the rockstars of the horse world, man.
Horses have natural odors that are a very strong fregrannce