Buckskin is not a breed of horse but a color. There is a buckskin registry but it has nothing to do with the breed of the horse but his coat color. The Pinto registry is the same thing. The Buckskin registry will take any breed of horse as long as it has the buckskin color.
Buckskin is a color, not a breed.
buckskin Buttermilk was a buckskin colored quarter horse.
Because Buckskin is a color of horse and not an actually breed, it has nothing to do with how big the horse will get. Many breeds of horses are capable of coming in the buckskin coloring and therefore , the color can range from the smallest horse size (around 4.2 hands, or 18inches) to the largest available horse sizes, nearly 21hh (or around 82 inches or just over 6ft, 10inches).
Buckskin is a color not a breed. There are buckskin Quarter Horses, Paints, ect. So the color of the horse has nothing to do with what they are used for.
I believe it was a buckskin
Quarter Horse
Well possibly, this would mainly depend on the color of the mare. Buckskin is a dilute color and will dilute the base color of a horse (Bay + Cream= buckskin etc,).
name it what ever you want
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.
Spirit was a Kiger Mustang. He has a buckskin coat.
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.
Buckskin is a color and not a true breed. So considering that many buckskin colored horses are Quarter horses, and most Paint horses descend from Quarter Horses that would mean the cross would run at the same speed as a purebred of either breed. Between 40-50 MPH.