Yes, it is possible for a buckskin mare bred to a chestnut stallion to produce a gray foal. Gray is a dominant gene that can override the base coat color of the parents, so the foal could inherit the gray gene from either parent and express it in its coat color.
you will get almost any colour because your horses colour is not determined by the colour of it' s parents. you can have two chestnut horses that breed to make a bay foal. unless the horse is bred to be a specific colour, like the Cleavland Bay breed. the foals colour all depends on its genetic material.
Spirit is a buckskin Kiger mustang stallion. Most horses of the kiger mustang breed are duns, but Spirit is a buckskin, a color most notably different from duns by the absence of primitive markings, such as a dorsal stripe and barring. Spirit is also a stallion, meaning he's intact, unlike geldings.
Breeding a strawberry roan stallion with a blue roan mare may result in a roan foal that could be a mix of the parents' colors, such as a bay roan or red roan. Roan is a coat color pattern that results in a mixture of colored and white hairs throughout the coat.
well horses arent like people usually. they tend to be one color for example the dad could be black and the mom could be buckskin so the horse probably wont be a mixture it will either be black or buckskin. NOT MIXED
Find a Perlino Stallion who is genetically AAEECrCr and the breeding will produce 100% buckskin foals no matter the genetics of the mare. If the stallion is AaEeCrCr or AAEeCrCr the foal could be a palomino. The chestnut mare could be aaee, Aaee or AAee combinations with a stallion who has Aa genetics where the mare is aa or Aa at the Agouti site could produce a smokey black.
Palomino
Buckskin or Smoky Black
In horses liver chestnut is a type of chestnut. So chestnut to chestnut will produce a chestnut foal. The actual shade of chestnut will be controlled by underlying factors that are not well understood.
yes. as long as one of the parents has a pinto/paint breed/coloring you can get a paint foal
Yes, if the genetics of the stallion and the mare at the Extension sites are both, at least Ee.
an old one
There's no way to guarantee that any two horses will produce a buckskin, to the best of my knowledge. To produce a buckskin, however, at least one parent must carry the cream gene. The cream gene is responsible for lightening a bay horse into buckskin, and it is also what causes palomino and other colors. If you breed two smokey black (black with one cream gene) horses, you cannot get a buckskin. Likewise, if you breed two palomino horses, or one palomino and one chestnut, you will not get a buckskin.
50% chance of a creme dilute either a palomino, a buckskin or a smokey black based on the base coat color genetics of the parents. The sorrel mare could be AAee Aaee or aaee The buckskin stallion could be AAEe, AAEE, AaEe, or AaEe If the stallion is AAEE all foals will be bay or buckskin. If both the stallion and the mare carry an a allele a smokey black could be produced.
If the black and white mare is aaEe and bred to a cremello stallion --eeCrCr the foal produced will be smokey black, buckskin, palomino based on the stallion's genetics at the Agouti site. If the mare is aaEE the foal will be smokey black, buckskin...no palomino foals. The type(s) of pattern genetics the mare carries will determine the spotting pattern of the foal (or lack there of).
Buckskin is not a breed of horse but a color. There is a buckskin registry but it has nothing to do with the breed of the horse but his coat color. The Pinto registry is the same thing. The Buckskin registry will take any breed of horse as long as it has the buckskin color.
To practically guarantee a buckskin foal you need to breed a bay with a double dilute (either cremello or perlino) The double dilute will always pass on one of the dilution genes. Bay is dominate over chestnut so the chances of producing a palomino are reduced, but you will always get a single dilute foal with this combination. Palomino - dilute chestnut Buckskin - dilute bay Cremello - double dilute chestnut Perlino - double dilute bay