no it doesn't.
flaxen liver chestnuts can be about any breed, including the Rocky Mountain Horse
Silver dilutes black pigment. Silver has no effect on Red. And a black horse carrying the silver gene will be brownish/chocolate with flaxen mane and tail.
Yes. It is possible to have a dark base color and a light mane and tail color for a horse. ADDED 8/7/10 It is possible to have a dark base color and a light mane and tail color for a horse (flaxen gene), but it is NOT possible for a true black horse to have a white mane and tail, or even a brown mane and tail. It can sun bleach a bit, but will darken back up as new hairs grow in. It will never be white, unless coated in snow. The flaxen gene, which is what gives a horse a lighter colored mane and tail, does not affect black pigment, only red.
Blonde or pale yellowish to yellowish brown in color.
You could get either a palomino or a chestnut. Since a palomino is a diluted chestnut, and a chestnut has no dilution genes, it will balance out the foal's genes so that it could be either color! Good Luck!
Sorrel and Chestnut are genetically the exact same color. It is nothing more than a difference of terminology. 1. In most English riding circles Sorrel refers to a chestnut horse with a flaxen (blonde) mane and tail. While chestnut is a solidly chestnut body, mane and tail. 2. Some western stock breed registries use sorrel to mean a darker shade of chestnut with matching mane and tail. And chestnut for lighter shades, with or without a flaxen mane and tail.
Flaxen is a recessive color gene. It is also used to describe a coat color such as a chestnut with a flaxen mane and tail.
Palomino. Could also be bay silver or flaxen chestnut.
White or a light creamish color. Either way, it is called flaxen.
Silver dilutes black pigment. Silver has no effect on Red. And a black horse carrying the silver gene will be brownish/chocolate with flaxen mane and tail.
that would be the Halfinger
well a black horse with a golden mane and tail (flaxen) Is usually a type of silver dapple color. The color is most seen in Rocky Mountain Horses, but can appear in almost any breed. The silver dapple color can range from nearly beige body with snow white mane and tail to a black color with a flaxen(golden) or silvery mane and tail.
Yes. It is possible to have a dark base color and a light mane and tail color for a horse. ADDED 8/7/10 It is possible to have a dark base color and a light mane and tail color for a horse (flaxen gene), but it is NOT possible for a true black horse to have a white mane and tail, or even a brown mane and tail. It can sun bleach a bit, but will darken back up as new hairs grow in. It will never be white, unless coated in snow. The flaxen gene, which is what gives a horse a lighter colored mane and tail, does not affect black pigment, only red.
Rocky Mountain Horses can be many colors, but are often a chocolate-brown color with a flaxen (cream) mane and tail.
You dont normally see a horse with a true black body and white mane and tail. There is a color called chocolate with a flaxen mane and tail. this is where the body is a dark brown (some times apears black) with a white/golden mane and tail. When the horses body is white and the main and tail are black this is a form of hte color gray
Blonde or pale yellowish to yellowish brown in color.
Palomino horses are golden with a flaxen mane and tail
That would most likely be the Haflinger.