A bay mare could be AaEe, AAEe, AaEE or AAEE.
The stallion could have very similar genetics to the mare or he could also carry At to make him a nearly black horse with a red muzzle and flanks.
The foal is most likely to be bay, however is both parents carry e there is a 25% chance of a chestnut foal.
Whatever colour either of the parents are the foal could be, and it could just be any random colour, but the most common is the colour of either of the parents.
Palomino
A mare and stallion breed and make baby called a foal.
Buckskin or Smoky Black
87.89% -Bay6.25% -Chestnut5.86% -Black
You can buy one from the auctions or the private sales. Or you can breed a mare and hope that the foal turns out to be a colt that will grow up to be a stallion.
yes. as long as one of the parents has a pinto/paint breed/coloring you can get a paint foal
This depends on the DNA characteristics. If your mare or the stallion is homogeyous for a colour or pattern, then that will likely show up in the foal.
It varies with the horse, but generally you will get a dark grey colt or filly. This is because the genes of the darker horse will make your foal a darker colour but the lighter of the pair kepps the colour from becoming completely black. Example: Cremello Stallion x Chestnut Mare = Either buckskin or palomino.
So long as they are from the same breed and both parents are registered, yes you can breed a trotter to a pacer and register it.
In the wild, a stallion won't hurt a new foal if it is his own. However, if they steal a herd from another stallion, they might try to kill those foals simply because they are not his own. This is so that only the offspring of the strongest and best stallions live. Some human-kept studs will hurt a new foal, and should never be left unattended with a new foal. There are some stallions that can be left with the mare and foal. These are typically stallions that have been raised in a herd and pasture breed. Never leave a hand-breed stallion alone with a mare or foal.
It really depends on the breed of the mare and stallion. Normally, the foal would just be a cross breed, but, for example, if you bred a quarter horse and an Arabian, the foal would be classed as a Quarab. Or, if you breed a warm blooded sport horse with an Irish Draught horse, the foal would be classed as an Irish Sport Horse. Hope this helps! :)