Grey horses start out colored (bay, black, chestnut et cetera) and over time the number of white hairs increase until the horse becomes "white". The rate of change can be quite variable, with some horses remaining dark for many years and others will be virtually white before they hit their teens.
a horse with white or grey fur is called a grey.
grey. even if the entire horse is white, if it's nose ISN'T pink, it is considered grey. if it is white with grey spots you might call that a dappled grey.
You cant get a white horse they are technically grey. White horses don't exist. if you mean grey, try a good shampoo and bath it.
Technically, there is no such thing as a true white horse. All "white horses" are variations of grey. There is a white grey because it is a variation of grey. So yes, there are such things as "white" grey racehorses. They aren't very common, though.
Grey.
No, his horse was actually a grey. There are no "pure white" horses. They are all grays. Even the Lipizzaner horses of Vienna are grey.
A greyish horse is called a grey horse nice and simple, so is a white horse ( called a grey that is ).
grey
Skewbald is a specific pattern of colored and white patches on a Paint or Pinto horse.
He may look white, but there is a difference between white and grey.
White. Answer2: Napolean had many horses, but his most famous (and his favorite) horse was Marengo, an Arabian stallion. Marengo was a grey. A grey Arabian will start out a darker color such as black, bay, or Chestnut and slowly turn a white color. Grey horses can be distinguished from True white horses by the color of the skin under their hair. A grey horse will have grey skin and a white horse will have pink skin.
There is no such thing as a horse with a blue mane and white skin. However a grey horse (has grey or black skin) can have a light grey mane which could appear blue in the right light and a white looking coat.