Without knowing exact specifics about each horse you can reasonably expect a 50/50 chance at either a palomino or a cremello foal.
Palomino
Sometimes it is true that breeding two palominos will result in a cremello foal. When bred together, two palominos can produce: 25% Cremello 25% Palomino 50% Chestnut
From me looking at Cremello horse family trees, i just depends on luck I guess
Palomino is a color and not a breed. Palomino's came into being when a cremello(Dilute color) horse bred with a chestnut colored horse, thus creating a palomino colored foal. The color was favored throughout the centuries and promoted by queens and kings.
To practically guarantee a buckskin foal you need to breed a bay with a double dilute (either cremello or perlino) The double dilute will always pass on one of the dilution genes. Bay is dominate over chestnut so the chances of producing a palomino are reduced, but you will always get a single dilute foal with this combination. Palomino - dilute chestnut Buckskin - dilute bay Cremello - double dilute chestnut Perlino - double dilute bay
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.
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.
There's no way to guarantee that any two horses will produce a buckskin, to the best of my knowledge. To produce a buckskin, however, at least one parent must carry the cream gene. The cream gene is responsible for lightening a bay horse into buckskin, and it is also what causes palomino and other colors. If you breed two smokey black (black with one cream gene) horses, you cannot get a buckskin. Likewise, if you breed two palomino horses, or one palomino and one chestnut, you will not get a buckskin.
Well, it depense what you are talking about. The breed of palomino or the color. If it is the breed palomino, than NO it isn't gaited. If it is the color, it depense what breed ot os! Hope i helped!
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
Palomino is a color and not a breed produced by the introduction of the Creme gene on an otherwise chestnut horse. A palomino is eeCrcr and has to be heterozygous at the creme dilution locus. A homozygous creme horse that is otherwise chestnut at the extension site is eeCrCr which produces the double dilute color of cremello, a horse that is nearly white with blue eyes.
The Palomino registry is a color registry. The horse must be the correct color to be registered with the breed. A horse can be a palomino and not a member of the breed, but the breed has only palomino colored horses in it. Palomino is a breed and a color although it is most often used as the color for example i have a Palomino Dun Appaloosa