That would most likely be the Haflinger.
that would be the Halfinger
That would most likely be the Haflinger (which is also known as the Avelignese in Italy, though they are the same breed.) The Haflinger is always chestnut (never palomino as they do not carry the cream gene.) and have flaxen manes and tails. They are very hardy and sturdy ponies that are used for many different tasks.
If you mean the American breed of cart horse, they are usually chestnut.
Breeding a chestnut paint with a sorrel paint can result in a foal of various coat colors, as both chestnut and sorrel are base coat colors that can produce a range of outcomes. The foal could inherit either of the parent's colors or a combination of both, such as chestnut, sorrel, or a coat pattern that includes markings from both parents.
You can't really put a height on that because Sorrel is a colour of horse (a bright red chestnut) and not a breed.
Genetic research says you are more likely to get a Palomino.I had 1 Palomino and 3 chestnuts out of one mare and a light sorrel out of another.
Halfingers, they are born chestnut and stay that way for the rest of its life. :) The above is correct, but its Flaxen Chesnut. If your looking for the Horse Isle 2 answer, Its the Suffolk Punch. (I am ClosetMonster on HI2)
There are several different possibilities, depending on the genetic makeup of the parents. The possibilities are: Chestnut bay black red dun dun grulla
If you breed a black horse and a gray horse, you can get quite a variety of colors. If the gray horse has a black base (was born black), then the offspring will either be black or black-based gray. If the gray horse is chestnut-based or bay-based, however, you can get black, chestnut, bay, black-based gray, chestnut-based gray, or bay-based gray. It's most likely that the gray horse is black-based, though genetic testing would probably be required to find out for sure.
In horses liver chestnut is a type of chestnut. So chestnut to chestnut will produce a chestnut foal. The actual shade of chestnut will be controlled by underlying factors that are not well understood.
A hafflinger is a breed of horse. It originated from the Tyrolean mountains on the border of Austria and northern Itally. Did you know it can be traced right back to the middle ages? They believe the breed of horse was used in the war! Also, it can only be chestnut with a flaxen mane and tail. Opinionally I think they are amazing and strikingly active.
Chestnut is not a breed. It is only a colour designation.