Palomino horses are generally about seventeen hands tall. This is considered much taller than the average breed of horses. They are commonly seen with golden coats and white or cream colored manes.
Palomino is not a breed. Palomino is a COLOR. Just like paint horses are not a breed, they are a COLOR. Palomino can be found in most but not all breeds of horses.
Palomino is a denomination of a color, not a breed, because you can find peruvian horses that are palomino colored, or quarter mile horses that are palomino colored, etc
Since palomino is a color and not a true breed, the predators would vary slightly depending on the horses location. Palomino is a chestnut horse that inherited one copy of the cream gene and was born palomino. That means that palomino horses can occur in any breed with both chestnut and cream colored horses. In most areas a horses predators are dogs/ wolves, big cats, bears, and humans.
The same thing as any other horse! Palmino is just a color!
Palomino and pinto are coats. You cannot tell which horse is better just by coats.
Palomino is a horse breed and colour and im pretty sure that it is
Palomino horses are golden with a flaxen mane and tail
There is no way to answer this question. A palomino is a color not a breed or type of horse. Many different breeds accept the palomino color in their registries, from miniature horses to Quarter Horses and everything in between.
Palomino is a color and quarter horses are breeds. So the price of a palomino Quarter Horse may be vastly different than a palomino Saddlebred. I actually have one too! Some are for free and some can be a lot! It depends on what they do and if they show what they usually place and classes they're in. Also who bred them and the temperament and a lot more!
Palomino is a color, not a breed. Palomino coloring can be found in many breeds, therefore the length of the horse will be determined more by the breed than the color.
Palomino is a color not a breed, therefore a palomino can be of any height. Any breed that carries both the chestnut (red) gene and the cream gene can produce a palomino colored foal. This includes miniature horses all the way up to draft sized horses.