a white spot under their lip, in their ear and/or under their tail. some horses are spotted some are not. their disposition is offten very stubborn! look me up: ThoroughbredLover, and i own an appaloosa mare who is regestered but is a chestnut color with not obvious spots!
icelandic horses are commonly chestnut, dun, bay, black, gray, palomino, pinto and roan
Mustangs coloring isn't really specific. They can be Pinto, bay, black, chestnut, grey, basically any color. Bay, chestnut, and black are probably a few of the most common.
Pinto is a color not a breed. Paint horses are a breed of pinto marked horses. So therefore a pinto colored horses habitat will vary considerably.
"Calico" in horses is called Pinto . This is a mix of white and typically one other color, though if the horse is a bay or another color that has black points it's referred to as a tricolor pinto.
No. Purebred Friesians are black. Very rarely chestnut or bay crops up.
Pinto is a type of coloring/marking found in many breeds and types of horses. That means that pinto horses can live most anywhere.
Bay
It is called a foal still, because pinto horses are still a type of horse
Feral horses can be a variety of colours. they can be bay, chestnut, brown, piebald, pinto, grey, dapple grey, black, etc...
pinto horses eat hay. dry feed, bran, oats, grass, barley, and hay.
No, it is not, but it is more common in these colour horses. It is called a wall eye if it is blue.
they don't live in one specific country. pinto horses are spread all across the world.