If you're talking about what color the foal would be when it was born, then there's really no way to tell. It all depends on the dam's and sire's genetics. The foal could come out light bay. It also could come out grey. But it could also come out a number of other colors such as black, palomino, buckskin, piebald, etc. depending on the breed of its parents and its DNA.
Nine times out of ten, it would be a Clydesdale, because they are bred for pulling carts. Just because a horse is a stallion and it happens to be black, does not make it super strong!
They can't be bred to one another. They are genetically too dissimilar.
No. Bred mares are not receptive to the stallion because they are bred, not in heat.
Yes.
nothing, they have different number of chromosomes.
Maiden mare: never been bred Open mare: had a foal but not bred back to a stallion Barren mare: bred or bred back to a stallion but not in foal
Sunday Homespun, Quarter Horse Stallion, Hancock Foundation Bred
A mare is usually due to foal about 11 to 12 months after being bred to a stallion.
I would say Black.
It would produce a rarely seen variety called a timberback.
A stud in horse terms means that there is a set price for the stallion to mate with a mare. He is usually not for sale. Answer2: Many people wrongly assume the term stud refers to a stallion, but really it refers to the breeding farm itself. That's why you'll see the term 'Stallion at stud' listed in horse magazines and on websites. However nowadays the term is used interchangeably for the farm and the stallion itself, although the correct term for the stallion would be 'stud stallion'.
Where the mare foals determines the foal's status as a state bred, however, each registry and state are somewhat different. If the mare foals in a state where she is not entered into a state bred program but foals in the state where the stallion stands the foal may be a state bred. The foal may not be a state bred in some states if she is not in the state and registered as a state bred before a certain date. So...a foal could be born in Virginia (which would show on the foal's papers) but the foal might not be able to participate in any state bred programs because the sire or dam's status does not meet state criteria.