That all depends on genetics and what genes the 2 horses have. Cannot give you an exact answer unless the horses are homozygous for the color gene they have. You can breed 2 horses of the same color and make a completely different color.
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.
You would breed a chestnut to a black, or if you wanted a bay paint, black paint to a black
You are likely to get a chestnuty/bay colour I think.
Well first off colt is a male and Filly is a female...foal is a baby horse. So if you breed a chestnut to a brown horse you would likely get the following chances. 58.34% bay/brown, 33.33% chestnut, and 8.33% black.
Usually the darker color will dominate, the foals color will usually be the darker of the two. But sometimes it will depend on the genes too.
Chestnut - 29% Flaxen Chestnut - 15% Cherry Bay - 6% Flaxen Liver Chestnut - 2% Liver Chestnut - 21% Black - 3% Bay - 10% Dark Bay - 8% Light Grey - 1% Dapple Gray - 2% Dun - 3%
Bay could be AaEE AaEe AAEE or AAEe the roan component could be RnRn or Rnrn. The color of the parents and grandparents may help the breeder determine if the parent could be homozygous for Rn, A. The chestnut parent is --ee. Again the color of the parents and grandparents may help determine the genetics of this parent at the agouti site. If the bay roan parent is AaEeRnrn and the chestnut parent is Aaee 25% chance of chestnut roan 25% chance of chestnut 12.5 % chance of black 12.5% chance of black roan 12.5 % chance of bay 12.5% chance of bay roan
Bay could be AaEE AaEe AAEE or AAEe the roan component could be RnRn or Rnrn. The color of the parents and grandparents may help the breeder determine if the parent could be homozygous for Rn, A. The chestnut parent is --ee. Again the color of the parents and grandparents may help determine the genetics of this parent at the agouti site. If the bay roan parent is AaEeRnrn and the chestnut parent is Aaee 25% chance of chestnut roan 25% chance of chestnut 12.5 % chance of black 12.5% chance of black roan 12.5 % chance of bay 12.5% chance of bay roan
it can vary but some times it can be a liver chestnut or a bay or a normal chestnut. the colour could be any but i would suggest you go on a proper horse website
Black, Bay, Dark bay or brown, Gray, or Chestnut.
Coat color is always an acquired trait in horses. For example, if you breed a black horse and a chestnut horse, you can get a black, bay, or chestnut foal, but never a palomino, buckskin, grullo, roan, or any other color.
The main color of Thoroughbred horses is bay/dark bay and brown. Chestnut makes up approximately 20-25% of the overall population.