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No. There may be a VERY minute chance depending on the genes of the parents, but most likely, no.

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Q: Can you get a cremello foal with a paint mare and bay quarter horse?
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What breed of a horse will you get if you breed a paint - quarter horse with a thoroughbred?

When you cross a quarter horse and a thoroughbred, you will get an appendix quarter horse. The paint may or may not come out in the foal. That is all in the genetics, and I would need more info to tell you that.


If you breed a quarter horse and a paint can the foal be a registered AQHA or just APHA?

If its a purebred Paint and a Purebred QH, you should be able to register it with both associations. Hope this helps.


What is the difference between a Quarter Horse and a Paint horse?

Very little. The Paint horse began as Quarter Horses that had excessive white markings, in Paint talk these are called 'cropouts'. Two solid colored QHs can and do quite ofter produce a foal that is very colorful. The AQHA has color restrictions, so many of these very nice 'cropouts' were not accepted for registration, making their value much less. So the American Paint Horse Association was born. Since 1965 these wonderful, colorful horses have grown in popularity for their kindness, versatility and beautiful coats.


What horse should you breed with a quarter horse on howrse?

Depends on what you're aiming for really. If the quarter horse is purebred, then you can breed it with another purebred QH to get a purebred foal, or you can crossbreed with another breed.


What is the difference between an Appendix Quarter Horse and Quarter Horse?

A quarter horse is one that is registered with the American Quarter Horse Association (AQHA) or other similar registries (Australian Quarter Horse Association, for example), as having two registered quarter horse parents. The AQHA recognizes the offsrping of a quarter horse and a Thoroughbred (registered with the Jockey Club) by registering them in their "Appendix" registry. A foal born as a result of the mating of a quarter horse and a thoroughbred is referred to as an "appendix" or an "appendix quarter horse." An appendix quarter horse can attain regular registry status by earning 10 or more points in AQHA shows and races.

Related questions

What breed of a horse will you get if you breed a paint - quarter horse with a thoroughbred?

When you cross a quarter horse and a thoroughbred, you will get an appendix quarter horse. The paint may or may not come out in the foal. That is all in the genetics, and I would need more info to tell you that.


What crosses produce a buckskin foal?

Typically a cremello or palomino crossed to a bay or black horse will produce a buckskin foal.


Where on HorseIsle is the foal Adoption for Leopard Foals?

Still unsure! Whitherton on Rider Isle! BarbaroLady from Cremello Server on Horse Isle and Yola from Cremello!


If you breed a quarter horse and a paint can the foal be a registered AQHA or just APHA?

If its a purebred Paint and a Purebred QH, you should be able to register it with both associations. Hope this helps.


If you breed a cremello mare to a palomino stud what colors can I expect?

Without knowing exact specifics about each horse you can reasonably expect a 50/50 chance at either a palomino or a cremello foal.


What foal adoption center on HorseIsle has unlimited cremello foals?

Jungle Isle Foal Adoption Center carries and unlimited supply of cremello foals


How can you get a palomino foal?

Look around and when you see a horse farm ask them if they know anyone who has any for sale. Most people with horses know others with them too! A chestnut (A.K.A Sorrel) horse crossed with a cremello will always come out with a palomino foal.


What is the difference between a Quarter Horse and a Paint horse?

Very little. The Paint horse began as Quarter Horses that had excessive white markings, in Paint talk these are called 'cropouts'. Two solid colored QHs can and do quite ofter produce a foal that is very colorful. The AQHA has color restrictions, so many of these very nice 'cropouts' were not accepted for registration, making their value much less. So the American Paint Horse Association was born. Since 1965 these wonderful, colorful horses have grown in popularity for their kindness, versatility and beautiful coats.


If you breed a chestnut mare to a cremello stallion the resulting foal will be?

Palomino


What color will the foal be from a white stallion and chestnut mare?

That depends on the color of the Paint stallion. Not the PATTERN, but the color other than white that is on the horse. The Paint pattern of the stallion and the white markings of the mare factor into whether the foal will have a Paint pattern, so I can't answer to that at all without more information.To answer about the color other than white that the foal might be.....If the Paint is chestnut or sorrel and white, the foal will be chestnut or sorrel.If the Paint is bay and white, the foal may be chestnut/sorrel or bayIf the Paint is black and white, the foal may be chestnut/sorrel, bay, or blackIf the Paint is palomino and white, the foal may be chestnut/sorrel or palominoIf the Paint is buckskin and white, the foal may be chestnut/sorrel, palomino, bay, or buckskinIf the Paint is cremello and white, the foal will be palominoIf the Paint is perlino and white, the foal will be palomino or buckskinIf the Paint is grey and white, you need to find out what color he was born. He would have been born one of the colors above (chestnut/sorrel, bay, black, palomino, buckskin, cremello, or perlino), then turned grey. Find out what color he was born, and then look at the list above. Your foal will be born one of the given colors, then have a 50% chance of turning grey. If the foal is going to turn grey, usually by 4 weeks of age they will have light hairs coming in around their eyes, on the muzzle, etc.If the Paint is dun and white, you need to figure out what the base color is and refer to the list above. The dun gene dilutes a base color, and is not passed along to every foal. Grulla is a black horse with the dun gene, red dun is a chestnut/sorrel horse with the dun gene, and "dun" is a bay horse with the dun gene. Palmino's with a dun gene are called dunalino, and buckskin's with a dun gene are called dunskin.If the Paint is red roan (chestnut/sorrel with the roan gene), your foal may be chestnut/sorrel, or red roan.Roan genes in Paints can be hard to figure out because the Sabino overo gene can make a horse look roan, when really they are not. A roan horse must have had a roan parent, so look at the color of the ancestors...if neither Paint parent was a roan, the stallion is not a roan either.If the Paint is a blue roan (black with the roan gene), your foal may be chestnut/sorrel, bay, or black and may also get the roan gene (red roan, blu roan, or bay roan)


Where on HorseIsle can you buy a Donkey Foal companion?

At the Desert isle foal adoption center. They cost 165k. ShireQueen on Cremello


What are the differences between cremello color and grey in horses?

Cremello is a color dilute gene that changes the base coat color of a horse to a lighter shade in utero. Grey is a color modifier meaning it causes the base color of the horse to slowly lighten to a white color over time after the foal has been born.