A horses personality trait is the way they act. The instuction that their brain is feeding their body. There appearance has nothing to do with the way they act of think. It is like a human with black hair being smarter than a human with brown hair. If your relating this question to the myth that blondes are dumb, or less smart than people of other hair colours, than neither of these two theories are true! Frankly, I'm 13 and have an 89% average thank you very much! ;)
-Quinnifer101
No of course not any horse can be as smart as any horse any color.
sorrel- a horse with a redish brown coat color. NO BLACK AT ALL. there can be white leg and face markings bay- a horse with a reddish brown coal with a black main, tail, and stripe down the back
Silver dilutes black pigment. Silver has no effect on Red. And a black horse carrying the silver gene will be brownish/chocolate with flaxen mane and tail.
OK, this is the general estimate. Not knowing what genes the horses were homozygous and heterozygous for, this is just a rough estimate: 33.34% - Black 33.34% - Bay 33.33% - Chestnut If you know the what the stud and/or the mare is homozygous and heterozgygous for, then you canget a more exact estimate if you go to the link in the relatedlinks.
They are traditionally bay, grey, chestnut, or black.
Breeding a chestnut paint with a sorrel paint can result in a foal of various coat colors, as both chestnut and sorrel are base coat colors that can produce a range of outcomes. The foal could inherit either of the parent's colors or a combination of both, such as chestnut, sorrel, or a coat pattern that includes markings from both parents.
roan
Buckskin is the most primal color of a horse. Chestnut or brown is the second most popular and basic colour for horses. Sorrel (or paint), black, white and bay are other popular and basic colours found in horses.
No. Bay horses are bay for life.
sorrel- a horse with a redish brown coat color. NO BLACK AT ALL. there can be white leg and face markings bay- a horse with a reddish brown coal with a black main, tail, and stripe down the back
Arabians: Roan, Bay, Black, Chestnut, and Grey for the Arabian Registry. Part Arabians: Paint/Pinto is Pintabian. Appaloosa is AraAppaloosa/Araloosa. Sorrel is part Arabian. Palomino is Part Arabian.
Black, Bay and Chestnut (also called sorrel). The other colors are created by dilution genes (such as Dun, Creme, Champagne, Silver alleles) and colors can be further affected by the mealy, sooty and grey genes.
sorrel- a horse with a redish brown coat color. NO BLACK AT ALL. there can be white leg and face markings bay- a horse with a reddish brown coal with a black main, tail, and stripe down the back
The American Quarter Horse comes in 5 colors: Black, Sorrel, Chesnut, Bay, and rarely White. But the most common color is Sorrel.
grey, fleabitten grey, dappled grey, bay, black, chestnut, liver chestnut, sorrel, brown, roan, strawberry roan, blue roan, dun, palomino, spotted, piebald, skewbald, cream, brindle
Silver dilutes black pigment. Silver has no effect on Red. And a black horse carrying the silver gene will be brownish/chocolate with flaxen mane and tail.
Most horses seem to have a shade of brown. There are many different shades of brown, a few of them being: sorrel(light golden brown), bay(dark brown with black mane, tail, and legs), and chestnut(dark brown).
Bay horses can be any size, as bay refers to a coloring of horse, in which their body is brown, and they have black manes, tails, and points.