Find a Perlino Stallion who is genetically AAEECrCr and the breeding will produce 100% buckskin foals no matter the genetics of the mare.
If the stallion is AaEeCrCr or AAEeCrCr the foal could be a palomino.
The chestnut mare could be aaee, Aaee or AAee combinations with a stallion who has Aa genetics where the mare is aa or Aa at the Agouti site could produce a smokey black.
50% chance of a creme dilute either a palomino, a buckskin or a smokey black based on the base coat color genetics of the parents. The sorrel mare could be AAee Aaee or aaee The buckskin stallion could be AAEe, AAEE, AaEe, or AaEe If the stallion is AAEE all foals will be bay or buckskin. If both the stallion and the mare carry an a allele a smokey black could be produced.
Buckskin is not a breed of horse but a color. There is a buckskin registry but it has nothing to do with the breed of the horse but his coat color. The Pinto registry is the same thing. The Buckskin registry will take any breed of horse as long as it has the buckskin color.
Most likely would be cremello, palomino, chestnut (sorrel) or another buckskin.
Buckskin is a color, not a breed.
Buck, Ben's horse, was a buckskin. Sport, Adam's horse, was a sorrel. Chubb or Chubby, Hoss's horse, was a dark brown. Cochise, Little Joe's horse, was a black and white pinto or a piebald. Black and white pinto means the same thing as piebald.
buckskin Buttermilk was a buckskin colored quarter horse.
Because Buckskin is a color of horse and not an actually breed, it has nothing to do with how big the horse will get. Many breeds of horses are capable of coming in the buckskin coloring and therefore , the color can range from the smallest horse size (around 4.2 hands, or 18inches) to the largest available horse sizes, nearly 21hh (or around 82 inches or just over 6ft, 10inches).
Buckskin is a color not a breed. There are buckskin Quarter Horses, Paints, ect. So the color of the horse has nothing to do with what they are used for.
You can't really put a height on that because Sorrel is a colour of horse (a bright red chestnut) and not a breed.
I believe it was a buckskin
Quarter Horse
There are several different possibilities, depending on the genetic makeup of the parents. The possibilities are: Chestnut bay black red dun dun grulla