It is a reddish-brown color.
The shade of a freshly opened horse chestnut, before the air turns it dark.
The differences between a buckeye and a horse chestnut is the way that they look. Buckeyes are bumpier. Buckeyes are a milk chocolate color when they are ripe, while horse chestnuts are a chestnut brown.
You could get either a palomino or a chestnut. Since a palomino is a diluted chestnut, and a chestnut has no dilution genes, it will balance out the foal's genes so that it could be either color! Good Luck!
its a white horse with brown spots on the horses back... its a very cool and cute coat in my opinion! :)
There isn't a "Burgundy" horse as such, It would either be a bay or a chestnut. A bay being either bright or dark brown with with black legs. A chestnut being a reddish kind of colour. No burgundy horse!
There is no such thing as a 'pink' horse. Some horses may look pink if they have enough white hairs mixed in with red ( chestnut/ sorrel) hairs. This is a red roan ( also sometimes called a strawberry roan or chestnut/ sorrel roan.)If a horse looks 100% truly pink it has likely been dyed that color.
Skewbald is a spotted horse with any base coat color other than black. So a skewbald horse could be bay and white, brown and white, chestnut and white, palomino and white, et cetera...just NOT black and white.
A bay horse is brown with a black mane and tail.
A filly is a baby female horse. And "Bay" is a horse with a dark mane and tail and a chestnut coat! Beautiful horses! :D
Skewbald is a spotted horse with any base coat color other than black. So a skewbald horse could be bay and white, brown and white, chestnut and white, palomino and white, et cetera...just NOT black and white.
a black horse with a black mane and tail is considered a black horse.
It will have wings. To find out exactly what it would look like, look for a horse in the auctions or private sales of the same breed and color as your horse with medusa's blood.