These percentages are from HorseTesting.com which has a color calculator on their website. I hope this helps.
29.17% buckskin
16.67% palomino
14.58% perlino
14.58% bay
8.33% Cremello
8.33% chestnut
4.17% smoky black
2.08% smoky cream
2.08% black.
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.
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
palomino is a horse color, not a breed.
Buckskin is a color, not a breed.
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.
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).
Palomino isn't a breed of horse, it is a colour. Answer 2: As stated above Palomino is a color, not a breed. The Palomino horse registries are color registries, not breed associations. You get Palomino coloring by breeding a horse with the cream gene to a chestnut and you should get a palomino. Any breed that carries both the cream and chestnut colorings can produce a palomino.
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 color and not a true breed! the palomino color has been around since ancient times.
Palomino is a color, not a breed. Palomino coloring can be found in many breeds, therefore the length of the horse will be determined more by the breed than the color.
Buckskin is a color of a horse. They are not a specific breed, though there are certain breeds that only have the color. For example, the Mustang.
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.