It all depends on your opinion on Paint horses. Many people that i have spoken with said that the past paint horses that they have had are high strung and extreamly jumpy. But that is not true if you are around them and they trust you, just like any other horse. If you dont spend enough time with them they are jumpy and afraid of humans.
Answer 2
This is an opinion question. My friend loves her paint! However, paints are sometimes bred for beauty and not brains. It all depends on the horse itself.
Anything! They are exactly like quarter horses...you just have to find the one with the right build and endurance for whatever you are looking to pursue!
Paints are one of thee BEST horses. I had a paint and i just loved him to death, which came to soon:(
The Paint is a breed with the spotted pattern called pinto.
yes but it might die dipending what
kind of paint!hahaha!
It would depend on what color the Paint horse is. (Paint is a breed, Pinto is a marking, neither are an exact color.)
Pinto is a color not a breed of horses. There is a Pinto Horse Association which can include any breed. The American Paint Horse Association includes only horses with Quarter Horse, Paint Horse, or Thoroughbred bloodlines. So a 'Pinto' is a white and any other color in 'patches' of any breed, while a 'Paint' is white and any other color in 'patches' of the Quarter Horse, Paint or Thoroughbred breeds.
paint? but im pretty sure paint is a breed...
Another paint horse.
the paint horse is a quarter horse. they are colored like brown and white, black and white. buckskin and white, any color that a horse is, with white.
Color is decided by genetics and nothing else. To get a grey paint you must breed at least one grey paint to another paint horse. Grey tends to be a dominant color and may override another color. The surest way to get grey is to breed two grey horses together.(And Paint is a breed, pinto is the markings.)
The breed matters little. The horse is what really matters. Whether it is a Shire or a Shetland, a paint or a quarter horse, you want an older, calm, well trained horse that has plenty of experience in the disipline you want to try. The breed or size doesn't matter- it's the heart and willingness of the horse to partner with you and keep you safe and allow you to learn and improve. Also, a Paint horse is likely to be genetically very similar to a Quarter Horse, since the Paint breed is a color breed that was derived from the Quarter Horse.
Paint horses are a color breed. To add to the above answer. Paint horses were originally 'crop out' Quarter horses that could not be registered due to having too much white on them. A registry was formed and after a while the Paint horse became a breed based on pedigree rather than color alone. Almost all Paint horses are registrable as pintos provided they have the correct markings.
Paint is a breed and buckskin is a color. To get a Paint, both parents must be registered Paints.However if you meant a pinto ( a horse showing one or more of several pinto spotting patterns) then what you would need to do is make sure you breed the buckskin colored horse to a pinto marked horse that is homozygous (dominant) for a pinto gene. Typically the easiest pinto pattern to breed for is tobiano.
chances are you will get a black horse with white small white specks.
No. Paint is not a color it is a breed. Pinto is a coat color that looks like a paint, yet can be on any other breed that alows it, but paint is it's own breed.
It's a paint horse. A black and white paint horse.