Roan does not affect a horses height in any way. Roan is simply a coat color modifier. A blue roan is just a black horse with the roan modifier.
Can be anywhere from 14-17 hands
Yes, it is possible.
You cant, you get a female or male orange roan, and breed it with a another gender horse with black coat and blue mane and tail with a vitamin like this Reg jockey+ Orange Roan Fem+ Black coat blue mane and tail male+ viatmin OR Reg Jockey+ Orange roan male+ Black coat blue mane and tail fem + viatamin
Blue Roan Brindle is probably the rarest horse color.
Well they can be brown, bay, cream, black, gray, palomino, blue roan, roan, maybe sort of whitish but no horse is completely white. And a lot more...
There may those who paint their pony blue, but it not a natural color for equines.
Tennessee Walking horse quarta horses appaloosa
As a blue roan is more black & grey than blue - unless you have used a little artistic license - any of the primary colours, will work well.
The roan color is created when a bay, chestnut, or black horse has the roan gene, which works white and gray hairs into the coat so that only the head, lower legs, and the mane and tail show characteristics of the original color. A bay horse with the roan gene (called Bay Roan) will look a reddish-pink color except on his head and legs which will be brown and the mane and tail which will be black. A chestnut horse with the roan gene (called Strawberry Roan/Red Roan) will have more of an orangey reddish colored head, lower legs, mane, and tail, and the body will appear pink or strawberry colored. On a black horse with the roan gene (Blue Roan) the head, legs, mane, and tail will be black and the body will appear blue.
Blue roan.
Yes, it is! You can check in other places too.
A blue roan horse is not actually blue, though they can look blue. They have a mixture of black and white hairs that appear gray or "blue". They differ from gray horses because they are born blue and stay blue their entire lives. A gray horse is born a solid color, but gradually get more and more white hairs until they are completely white. It is sometimes hard to tell a gray horse from a blue roan. One way to tell is to look at the head and around the eyes. In a gray horse, they will go white around the eyes first. A blue roan horse will keep a nearly black head no matter what age they are.
Blue Roan,Black, Orange Roan , Blue Roan, Golden black and tan,red roan