Palomino.
Could also be bay silver or flaxen chestnut.
Blonde or pale yellowish to yellowish brown in color.
A palamino is a golden horse with a white/cream mane and tail and a pinto is a black/brown and white horse
Colt has no matter. A chestnut horse, has a chestnut colored body with the same colored mane. A bay horse, Has darker brown (bay) body with generally a black mane.
It is called a palomino. The coat should be the color of a newly minted copper penny, and up to three shades darker or lighter than that. The mane and tail can range from white to ivory all the way to a cream-yellow color. I know this because my family runs a palomino breeding farm.
Yes. It is possible to have a dark base color and a light mane and tail color for a horse. ADDED 8/7/10 It is possible to have a dark base color and a light mane and tail color for a horse (flaxen gene), but it is NOT possible for a true black horse to have a white mane and tail, or even a brown mane and tail. It can sun bleach a bit, but will darken back up as new hairs grow in. It will never be white, unless coated in snow. The flaxen gene, which is what gives a horse a lighter colored mane and tail, does not affect black pigment, only red.
Palominos are horses colored cream, yellow, or gold with a white or silver mane.
the answer is zebra from:Laura Huynh
There is no such thing as a horse with a blue mane and white skin. However a grey horse (has grey or black skin) can have a light grey mane which could appear blue in the right light and a white looking coat.
There are no other names for Palomino. Palomino is a Gold colored Horse with a white Mane (hair) and tail.
This particular horse colour is commonly called a buttermilk buckskin. The body itself isn't exactly 100% white, but rather a light cream colour which appears white at first glance.
for howrse it is Isabella It is not a palomino at all but a cremello. A palomino is a chestnut horse with a single dilution gene. Instead of having a reddish-brown body, mane and tail it has a golden body and a white mane and tail. A cremello is a chestnut with two dilution genes. It has a very pale gold body and a white mane and tail. Bays and blacks also have dilutes and double dilutes - bay, buckskin, perlino and black, grey, smokey cream.
Perlino is a cream gene that is responsible for a number of horse coat colors. Horses with a chestnut base coat color and the cream gene will become palomino if they carry one cream gene, and will be cremello if they carry a pair of the cream genes.