Depends on the color of the mare before it turned gray.
When the mare was:
Chestnut/Sorrel/Red
25% Palomino
25% Gray out of Palomino
25% Gray out of Chestnut
25% Chestnut
For the other combinations please check: http://www.animalgenetics.us/CCalculator1.asp
Most likely a Palomino. It all varies on the mare and stallions mother and fathers.
But probably a palomino.
Both the stallion and the mare have known genetics at the Extension and Creme sites. Because they are both ee at the Extension site they cannot produce any color other than a red based foal so their genetics at the Agouti site will be masked.
Both are --eeCrcr. This cross has a 25% chance of producing a Cremello (--eeCrCR), a 25% chance of producing a chestnut and a 50% chance of producing a palomino.
Andalusians are primarily grey which is often referred to as white (the progression to a nearly white appearing grey generally takes 12-15 years but some horses become
"white" faster or remain darker longer than others).
There are no maximum expression sabino Andalusians and the breed tends to have very limited white markings.
The stallion is either Gg or GG at the gray site.
The breed of the mare is not stated, however, if she is also an Andalusian her "whiteness" is also a function of the gray allele.
If either stallion or mare is GG all foals produced will gray.
If the stallion and the mare are Gg 75% of the foals will be gray and 25% will be non-gray.
As to the color of the non-gray foals and the base color of the gray foals...we have
no idea of the genetics of the parents at the agouti and extension sites, however,
the foal is much more likely to be bay, black, brown than it is to be chestnut.
While there are chestnut Andalusians the chestnut allele is much less common than in other breeds...so the chance of chestnut is relatively remote.
Horse coat color is not an exact science - there are literally dozens of genes that control and affect the final coat color. Also, a grey horse doesn't throw a grey baby - the foal will have a different coat color that may fade to gray over time.
If you want to breed these two, I would say your chances of having a pure black foal are pretty slim. You also probably won't get a Paint or Pinto or Appaloosa (unless the stallion had those patterns prior to going gray). Other than that, the only way to find out is to get a foal from these two.
It depends, you cant make combinations of what color horse ya want
It is all based on genetics, so maybe palomino or a grey.
It depends on whether the stallion or mare is homogeneous for a certain color gene. You could have many possibilities, but a logical predication would be either palomino, chestnut, white, or bay. (Bay and chestnut being the two most common horse colors.)
Like with humans you have to look at genetics. The dominant gene will trump the others usually.
There is no way to answer this question. A palomino is a color not a breed or type of horse. Many different breeds accept the palomino color in their registries, from miniature horses to Quarter Horses and everything in between.
Palomino is a color and not a true breed! the palomino color has been around since ancient times.
Palomino is not a breed. Palomino is a COLOR. Just like paint horses are not a breed, they are a COLOR. Palomino can be found in most but not all breeds of horses.
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.
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.
This depends greatly on what color the stallion was before he greyed out. Grey is simply a modifying gene that causes the base color of a horse to loose pigment and become white with age, it's not an actual color itself. That said the foal would likely inherit one copy of the cream gene from the palomino dam, so would likely be some kind of dilute color and depending on the stallions grey status either heterozygous or homozygous he would have a 50% to 100% chance of going grey.
It depends on the genetics of the horse. You can have anything from a palomino miniature to a palomino draft. Remember palomino is a color not a breed.
Since palomino is a color, a palomino can weigh as much as any other type of horse.
So a Palomino mare is probably genetically AaCrcree, aaCrcree or she could carry At The term brown for the stallion is ambiguous so he could be AtacrcrEe AtAcrcrEE or AtAtcrcrEE or AtAtcrcrEe or he could carry the rare B gene or actually be liver chestnut. For the sake of simplicity we will assume that brown means black with a tan or red muzzle and flanks. They could produce a palomino, chestnut, bay, brown, black, smokey black, buckskin 50% chance of a dilute (cream foal) what color the cream gene modifies if inherited is basically an unknown.