There is no difinite way to tell, but it could end up being a chestnut overo foal. They foal could also get it from it's distance dam's or sire's (great grandsire, grandsire, great granddam, granddam).
Assuming that your definition of strawberry roan is a bay roan A-E-Rn-
The sorrel horse is --ee.
If both horses are Aa at the agouti site they could also produce a blue roan (black roan).
If your definition of strawberry roan is a red/chestnut roan...50% chance of chestnut roan and 50% chance of chestnut/sorrel.
50% chance of a roan foal.
If the roan horse is A-Ee 50% chance of chestnut or chestnut roan.
100% Palomino Very beautifull
I also recommend a Gold champagne stallion (Homozygous champagne) then you will have a beautifull gold champagne foal with your sorrel mare!
Most likely you would get a light horse with either blue eyes or black eyes. It would matter though because, to be specific, there is no such thing as a white horse. Any horse that is grey or anything lighter than grey, unless cremello, is called grey, even if it has white mane/tail and a complete white body. To tell the difference between cremello and grey would be they eyes, with cremello being blue and and grey being black. Also, nostrils, genitals and any other place where there is no hair and skin shows, will be pink on cremello. On grey, those hairless places can be black or mottled. But to answer your question, it would either be cremello or white/grey, nowhere in between.
you will get almost any colour because your horses colour is not determined by the colour of it' s parents. you can have two chestnut horses that breed to make a bay foal. unless the horse is bred to be a specific colour, like the Cleavland Bay breed. the foals colour all depends on its genetic material.
This depends on too many variables to give a definite answer. One would have to know the heredity of the horse,Bloodlines, the color of the sire and the dame, etc. then one could still not be one hundred percent sure of what color the foal would turn out. Jimmy Arnett, KY
Firstly let me say that breeding only for color is a very bad idea. Always breed for conformation, temperament and performance first and only from registered and proven breeding stock of good conformation and temperament. Now for the color genetics, you'd want a chestnut horse that is ee (the only way to get chestnut is if it's ee.) for the red base coat, that also does not carry agouti (responsible for black distribution.) so it would need to be aa also. You'll need a cremello horse with the above factors also. ee, aa, and carrying two copies of cream (the only way to get a horse to be cremello is if it carries two copies of cream.) so it would be CrCr. This would produce foals that are ee, aa, nCr or palomino in color (palomino only requires one copy of the cream gene.) You can test any horse for breeding by ordering a test through a reputable company or lab, pull some tail hairs from the potential breeding stock and send it in for testing. This will tell you 100% what genes your horses have and what the potential foals color(s) would be.
A horses color will have absolutely no effect on it's height. Also since black is usually an available color option for most breeds, the height would vary by breed.
You can certainly get an offspring if any mare and any stud breed when the mare is ready and of course both are fertile. If the cremello was bred with a palomino, a cremello foal would most likely be produced, thanks to the double dilution genes. If bred to a buckskin, then a perlino foal would be the resulting offspring.
Most likely you would get a light horse with either blue eyes or black eyes. It would matter though because, to be specific, there is no such thing as a white horse. Any horse that is grey or anything lighter than grey, unless cremello, is called grey, even if it has white mane/tail and a complete white body. To tell the difference between cremello and grey would be they eyes, with cremello being blue and and grey being black. Also, nostrils, genitals and any other place where there is no hair and skin shows, will be pink on cremello. On grey, those hairless places can be black or mottled. But to answer your question, it would either be cremello or white/grey, nowhere in between.
It would depend on what color the Paint horse is. (Paint is a breed, Pinto is a marking, neither are an exact color.)
The basic colors are black, chestnut, bay, brown. The modifications would be; palomino, buckskin, smokey black, cremello, perlino, dun, champagne, appaloosas, paints, roans, etc...
I feel like a dark-ish color can work. Maybe purple, black or gold, up to you!
Sorrell Booke was born on January 4, 1930 and died on February 11, 1994. Sorrell Booke would have been 64 years old at the time of death or 85 years old today.
you will get almost any colour because your horses colour is not determined by the colour of it' s parents. you can have two chestnut horses that breed to make a bay foal. unless the horse is bred to be a specific colour, like the Cleavland Bay breed. the foals colour all depends on its genetic material.
Yes, of course. But palomino is not a breed, it is a color. You would need to look at the breed to see if it would make a good jumper.
White
In the related links you will find a "foal color calculator" you type in the mares color, and if you know it, the genotypes, and the same for the studs. it will list all the possiblities and the chances of each color. I got the following: 58.34% - Buckskin 33.33% - Palomino 8.33% - Smoky Black However, I do not know your horses genotypes, so I would advise you redo it. Even if you don't know the genotypes, see what other chances you might get if your stud was a silver carier, or if your mare was heterozygous for the agouti trait. So do some experimenting and see what you get *Oh, and there is no such thing as an "Albino" horse. Cremello is often called albino. But had to let you know, because it doesn't offer Albino, it offers Cremello*
That would be the famous Holstein.
This depends on too many variables to give a definite answer. One would have to know the heredity of the horse,Bloodlines, the color of the sire and the dame, etc. then one could still not be one hundred percent sure of what color the foal would turn out. Jimmy Arnett, KY