The exact color of the foal will vary according to the exact genetic coding of both parents and without that information it can be almost impossible to tell you what color a foal may be.
Most likely would be cremello, palomino, chestnut (sorrel) or another buckskin.
How does the wood sorrel get it's energy?The wood sorrel gets it's energy is by the sun which produces the edible plant. Along with soil and water.
No. The male gets the money for cover, and the female gets the foal
It would all depend. The foal could have any color father. He could be black, and if one of more of his parents what chestnut, and the same thing with the mother, then the foal could be chestnut, but the most likely thing would be that the father is chestnut.
When you cover your mare on Howrse, the owner of the mare gets to keep the foal.
A mare has an insticnt and will not I repeat will not become pregnant before the foal is weaned but that is why a stallion that the foal is not sired will try to kill the foal so he can sire another foal of his own.
If you do not know that your mare is bred, then you would not know she was going to have a foal, but they usually have them without help. If a foal is stillborn then you would have to talk to your vet to see to it that your mare gets treatment, but there is nothing that you can do about the foal. Kiley
It depends on what genes the foal gets. You didn't mention what color the horse was before it turned grey, so that makes this difficult to answer. Grey isn't a color gene all its own, its a color modifying gene. Grey horses start out a normal color, and then their coat grows lighter as they mature.If the grey horse is dominant for grey, the foal will most likely be born a color and change to grey as he ages. If the grey horse is not homozygous for grey, then the foal has a 50-50 chance of being grey.
You can use a goat to raise an orphan foal, at least partially. However, the goat may not produce enough milk as the foal grows and there is a difference in the amount of fat in the milk of goat and horse. Also, it gets tough for the foal to nurse from the tiny goat as it grows. You may prefer to milk out the goat and feed the foal by hand. I would suggest that you feed at least partially with a mare's milk supplement available from your feed store to make sure the foal gets the proper nutrition. Leave the goat in with the foal. Goats make lovely companions for horses and your foal needs a companion as much as milk.
You will not be able to race anymore because your horse gets too old. :( That has happened to me so I bred my old mare with my level 6 male and got a wonderful foal! Also, if you would like to create a special breed, click on the magnifying glass at the bottom. Good luck!
Most orphan foal milk products are designed for the foal to be weaned at 2 to 3 months of age (about the same amount of time a foal gets it's primary nutrition from mare's milk). While the foal can be fed milk supplements through the 6th month the amount needs to be reduced as solid feed intake increases to limit inflammation of the growth plates.
A horse, particularly a mare, gets "unfertilized" by being not bred at all.