A horse with spots. Like the Appaloosa
Kathiawari, Kerry Bog Pony, and Knabstrupper
Buy it, breed one
Appaloosa Arabian horse Argentinean Crillo Australian pony Barb Brumby Canadian Horse Curly Chincoteague pony Connemara Donkey fjord friesian Gypsy Vanner Hackney Hanovarian Holstiner Irish Hunter Lustiano Knabstrupper Marwari Morgan Mustang Newfoundland pony Nokota paint horse Peruvian Paso Purebred spanish horse Quarter Horse Quarter pony Russian Don horse Shagaya Arabian Shetland Pony Tennessee Walker Standardbred thoroughbred Trakehner Welsh Pony
Mainly, there are two specific breeds of horses with spots. The pinto and appaloosa. The pinto has fewer, larger spots, and comes in fewer variations, where the appaloosa has many , smaller spots, and comes in more variations, such as blanket and leopard appaloosa. But keep in mind, that paints and pintos are different, pinto is a breed, paint is a color. There are actually more than that - Knabstrupper and the English spotted pony are two others.
Also the Pony of the Americas is a spotted & blanket coloured breed which was created by crossing appaloosa with shetland pony.~Natural~Yes, the Appaloosa.Yup. It's the Appaloosa, and it was first bred by the Native Americans, along with Paints and Mustangs.The answer you are probably looking for is the Appaloosa - however you are confusing a horse breed with coat patterning, though the two run hand in hand as the colour of a horses coat is controlled by its genes. The gene responsible for spotting is the Leopard Complex (Lp) and different spotting patterns happen depending whether the gene carried by the parents is homozygous(dominant or recessive) or heterozygous due to the Lp gene being incomplete. A horse's coat pattern that has a spotted rump is known as a blanket spot but other spotting pattens include leopard spot, snowcap, few spot and snowflake. The Lp gene is also responsible for other characteristics such as stripey hooves, white sclera and skin mottling. Other breeds of horses also have the Lp gene - notably the Knabstrupper and the English spotted pony.
This depends on what you mean by 'name'. It could mean actual names or breeds, so I will list both. A; Akhal-Teke/ Abby N; Nonius/ Norman B; Barb/ Buddy O; Orlov trotter/ Olivia C: Camargue/ Carly P; Percheron/ Percy D; Dales pony/ Donner Q; Quarab/ Quincy E; East Friesian/ Ester R; Russian Don/ Ruby F; Friesian/ Folly S; Shagya Arabian/ Shane G; Gelderlander horse/ Ginny T; Thoroughbred/ Trudy H; Highland pony/ Hippie U; Ukrainian Riding Horse/ Ulrich I; Irish Draught/ Ingrid V; Vyatka/ Vinny J; Jutland horse/ Jumper W; Wielkopolski/ Wanda K; Knabstrupper/ Kennedy X; Xilingol/ Xander L; Lusitano/ Louis Y;Yakutain horse/ Yakira M; Morab/ Mandy Z; Zweibrucker/ Zahara
There aren't any "rare" breeds of horses on Howrse. The closest you could get would be a Xanthos, Sleipnr, or the one and only Cowbra. Those are Divine horses though, and you can only get them in card packs, or spend millions of equus and buy one from auction. Or if you're lucky you can get one for 200,000e and 10 passes from a Private Sale.
Appaloosa. The answer you are probably looking for is the Appaloosa - however you are confusing a horse breed with coat patterning, though the two run hand in hand as the colour of a horses coat is controlled by its genes. The gene responsible for spotting is the Leopard Complex (Lp) and different spotting patterns happen depending whether the gene carried by the parents is homozygous(dominant or recessive) or heterozygous due to the Lp gene being incomplete. A horse's coat pattern that has a spotted rump is known as a blanket spot but other spotting pattens include leopard spot, snowcap, few spot and snowflake. The Lp gene is also responsible for other characteristics such as stripey hooves, white sclera and skin mottling. Other breeds of horses also have the Lp gene - notably the Knabstrupper and the English spotted pony.
Engish: Horse - Horse Spanish: Horse - Caballo French: Horse - Cheval German: Horse - Pferd Italian: Horse - Cavallo Dutch: Horse - Paard Danish: Horse - Hest Finnish: Horse - Hevonen Romanian: Horse - Calul Serbian: Horse - Kultura
in shakespeare's play, he wrote "a horse! a horse! my kingdom for a horse!"
I lost my horse. I miss my horse. Where is my horse?
Its called a seahorse or the river horse. Another popular name for the camargue horse is the horse of the sea