Yes you can!
The term Paint is a breed. Pinto is a coloring. Paints have pinto coloring.
No, it is a breed, but you can register as a Pinto because it is a colour unless that welsh is a pure breed paint.
A pinto is a colour, not a breed. this means it can be as big as a shire horse, or as small as a fallabella pony. Pinto is a coat colour of white and chestnut, normally in patches.
Shetlands are a breed of pony.
The Pinto breed is a color breed and is known for its spots. Paint Horses are also known for their spots, but Paints are Quarter Horses with spotted markings. A Pinto is any other breed with spots.
Pinto is a color not a breed. Paint horses are a breed of pinto marked horses. So therefore a pinto colored horses habitat will vary considerably.
Paint Palomino Pantaneiro Paso Fino Percheron Peruvian Paso Pindos Pony Pinia Pintabian Pinto Poitevin Polish Konik Pony of the Americas Pottok Przewalski Pyrenean Tarpan
A pony. Even if the breed's a horse breed not a pony breed.
No, it's an Arabian. Answer 2: Pinto is a type of color pattern, not a breed. The pinto markings have been around for a very long time though.
A paint is a breed. A pinto is a coloring. He is a pinto regardless of breed, but he could also be a paint depending on his parents.
Yes they are the same breed, but the term 'Irish Pony' can also be applied to any pony from Ireland so it is best to refer to each pony by it's correct breed name.
Mainly, there are two specific breeds of horses with spots. The pinto and appaloosa. The pinto has fewer, larger spots, and comes in fewer variations, where the appaloosa has many , smaller spots, and comes in more variations, such as blanket and leopard appaloosa. But keep in mind, that paints and pintos are different, pinto is a breed, paint is a color. There are actually more than that - Knabstrupper and the English spotted pony are two others.