50% chance of a creme dilute either a palomino, a buckskin or a smokey black based on the base coat color genetics of the parents.
The sorrel mare could be AAee Aaee or aaee
The buckskin stallion could be AAEe, AAEE, AaEe, or AaEe
If the stallion is AAEE all foals will be bay or buckskin.
If both the stallion and the mare carry an a allele a smokey black could be produced.
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,).
It would depend on what color the Paint horse is. (Paint is a breed, Pinto is a marking, neither are an exact color.)
Most likely would be cremello, palomino, chestnut (sorrel) or another 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.
There are several different possibilities, depending on the genetic makeup of the parents. The possibilities are: Chestnut bay black red dun dun grulla
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.
Sorrel Mare would be --ee (-- is unknown genetics at the agouti site and ee is homozygous recessive at the extension site. Buckskin Stallion is A-E-Crcr or A-EECrcr. Since the e allele is generally at a very high frequency in most horse populations we'll assume that the stallion is A-EeCrcr. 50% of all foals will be red based, either palomino or sorrel 50% of all foals will be non-red based, either bay or buckskin
Depending on the exact color of the pinto, you could most likely get two quite likely outcomes, and a third possible outcome. The most likely is a "buckskin paint", the second is a straight buckskin, and the third, (best of all) would be a grula or dun. Those two varry in tones but are quite expensive and rare.
That would most likely be the Haflinger.
that would be the Halfinger
If you breed a black horse and a gray horse, you can get quite a variety of colors. If the gray horse has a black base (was born black), then the offspring will either be black or black-based gray. If the gray horse is chestnut-based or bay-based, however, you can get black, chestnut, bay, black-based gray, chestnut-based gray, or bay-based gray. It's most likely that the gray horse is black-based, though genetic testing would probably be required to find out for sure.
You would most likely get either any shade or buckskin or a grullo