They're absolutely amazing if they have good genes, I own one. :D
Appendix.
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.
The most common color of an American Quarter horse is sorrel (a brownish red, which is part of th color group called chestnut by most other breed registries) But they do come in nearly all colors.
The breed of horse would be the Azteca. In Mexico the cross is predominately Criollo x Andalusian. While in the USA the American Azteca uses Quarter horse or paint stock in place of the Criollo.
Yes and no. The Paint horse was started as a breed due to Quarter horse breeders tossing out or killing perfectly good horses just because they had 'too much' white on them, which associated the horses with Native American tribes. To prove the horses were valuable the registry was started and any Quarter horse with too much white was allowed to be registered. they also then accepted Thoroughbreds into the registry after a period of time. Nowadays there are distinct bloodlines within the Paint and many of them are actually still purebred Quarter horses. The term paint refers to a horse with a broken coat color (there is a minimum amount of white over pink skin to be classified) that is also within strict bloodline requirements. To be registered with the APHA the parents must be registered with APHA, AQHA or the Jockey Club (meaning a thoroughbred). At least one parent must be APHA registered. Therefore, many paints are of strong quarter horse lineage, some horses are cross registered between the quarter horse and paint horse registries. When a horse is not within these breed requirements, yet still retains the colorful coat pattern they are simply called a pinto. Pinto refers to the coat color whereas paint is a breed.
A Canadian Honovarian cross
The Azteca is a cross between a Quarter Horse and an Andalusian.
I actually made up this breed. It is a cross between a Thoroughbred and a Quarter Horse.
A quarter horse.
The cross between an Arabian and Quarter Horse is not actually a breed. This cross is more commonly refered to as a Quar-ab and although the AQHA (quarter horse registry) will not accept this cross in their registry, the Arabian registry will accept this in the half Arab registry. This means you can show your horse at Arabian shows in the half Arab classes. The Quar-ab is a very pretty horse. You get the beauty of the Arabian and the calm nature of the Quarter Horse.
Appendix.
Mustangs tend to be small, less than 16 hands high, and bunchy/stocky. Basically they look like a cross between an Arabian and a Quarter Horse, although they tend to favor the Quarter Horse.
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.
Not too sure what you're asking here. Are you asking what the name of a horse would be if it's got Andalusian, Quarter Horse and Criollo? Well, for one, Criollo isn't exactly a true breed, it's just a colour breed, and if the horse of this mix is not Criollo itself the Criollo part of the equation wouldn't count nor matter. Thus this leaves us with the possibility of saying the horse is an Andalusian-Quarter horse cross. Answer 2: Well in Mexico the cross of Andalusian/Quarter horse & Criollo is called an Azteca. In the USA the cross is Andalusian/Quarter horse or Paint horse and is called an American Azteca.
no they are not they are not a rare breed of horse either.
Arabians and Quarter horses. But any horse can be trained to be good at cross county.
three day eventing, the clydesdale in the horse makes it a big bigger boned and able to take the shock of cross country. The other two provide the skill and the movement for dressage and stadium.