You can never be 100% sure what the color of a foal will be. You can make guesses, but you can never be 100% sure. It all depends on genetics. I would probably ask a vet if they could guess, but as I have said, you can never be completely sure.
it could be any colour but that is unlikely it could be a bay or a sorrel or a mixture really it is a very hard question to solve and sat if a horse was bay when born its baby fur could be taken over buy a chessy coat so reall it could be anything.
Not knowing what other color the paint mare is. The only thing that can be certain is that there is a 50% chance the foal will have paint markings.
It is probably referring to if a horse is of purebred genetics. Or simply if a horse is purebred Paint, or purebred QH, or purebred Arab, etc. whichever breed that horse may be. how much of that breed is in the horse. example: say you have a thoroughbred stallion who is pure. this means the stallion is 100% thoroughbred stallion and has no other breeds involved.
Pinto is a color not a breed of horses. There is a Pinto Horse Association which can include any breed. The American Paint Horse Association includes only horses with Quarter Horse, Paint Horse, or Thoroughbred bloodlines. So a 'Pinto' is a white and any other color in 'patches' of any breed, while a 'Paint' is white and any other color in 'patches' of the Quarter Horse, Paint or Thoroughbred breeds.
No. Paint is not a color it is a breed. Pinto is a coat color that looks like a paint, yet can be on any other breed that alows it, but paint is it's own breed.
A paint horse is a breed of horse, not a different species, so they live 25 to 50 years. Some people say that pinto and paint horses are the same but they are not. A paint horse is a breed of horse, but pinto is a type of coloring, meaning that any breed of horse can be a called pinto horse, as it is the coat pattern, not the breed of the horse, that defines a horse as a pinto horse.
An average horse weighs about 900 to 1200 pounds, but ranges much higher and much lower depending on the breed. However Pinto is not a breed of horse, it is a coloration, which looks like a Paint (which is a breed) but can be found in other breeds of horse.
The Black Stallion in the books and movies was an Arabian. In the TV series he was an American Quarter Horse. The horse feature in the books and in the movie of the Black Stallion was an Arabian stallion. The horse which appeared in the movie was actually called Cass Ole.
an old one
It would depend on what color the Paint horse is. (Paint is a breed, Pinto is a marking, neither are an exact color.)
It is probably referring to if a horse is of purebred genetics. Or simply if a horse is purebred Paint, or purebred QH, or purebred Arab, etc. whichever breed that horse may be. how much of that breed is in the horse. example: say you have a thoroughbred stallion who is pure. this means the stallion is 100% thoroughbred stallion and has no other breeds involved.
Pinto is a color not a breed of horses. There is a Pinto Horse Association which can include any breed. The American Paint Horse Association includes only horses with Quarter Horse, Paint Horse, or Thoroughbred bloodlines. So a 'Pinto' is a white and any other color in 'patches' of any breed, while a 'Paint' is white and any other color in 'patches' of the Quarter Horse, Paint or Thoroughbred breeds.
Rain is considered a paint mare in the movie. Because paint is a breed, if she was a pinto, that would just be her markings, she would have to have a breed, like mustang. Actually a Paint horse is just a horse type not the actual breed itself. They don't say what breed Rain is just her coat type. Only the breed of Spirit and his herd is mentioned.
paint? but im pretty sure paint is a breed...
yes. as long as one of the parents has a pinto/paint breed/coloring you can get a paint foal
Another paint horse.
the paint horse is a quarter horse. they are colored like brown and white, black and white. buckskin and white, any color that a horse is, with white.
Color is decided by genetics and nothing else. To get a grey paint you must breed at least one grey paint to another paint horse. Grey tends to be a dominant color and may override another color. The surest way to get grey is to breed two grey horses together.(And Paint is a breed, pinto is the markings.)
The breed matters little. The horse is what really matters. Whether it is a Shire or a Shetland, a paint or a quarter horse, you want an older, calm, well trained horse that has plenty of experience in the disipline you want to try. The breed or size doesn't matter- it's the heart and willingness of the horse to partner with you and keep you safe and allow you to learn and improve. Also, a Paint horse is likely to be genetically very similar to a Quarter Horse, since the Paint breed is a color breed that was derived from the Quarter Horse.