Duns are very beautiful horses, suitable names would be something like...
Pablo
Spirit
Germane
Flash
Choco
Harry
Quincey
Spirit, Stallion of the Cimmaron's coat is dun.
Dun can be red dun, blue dun or dun. If we assume that the dun is A-Dndn or A-DnDn We know the palomino is --eeCrcr 50% of the foals have the Crème allele and therefore be dilute. 50% of the foals (if the Dun parent is heterozygous Dndn) will have the Dun allele. If the dun parent is homozygous dun DnDn all foals produced will be dun. If the Dun horse is A-Dndn and Ee at the extension site. 50% of the foals will be red based. This could be chestnut, red dun, dunalino (palomino and dun), 50% will be non-red. This could be bay, dun, dunskin (dun and buckskin) If the Dun horse is A-DnDn and Ee at the extension site. 50% of the foals will be red dun or dunalino 50% of the foals will be dun or dunskin. If both the stallion and the mare carry the true black allele a there is the possibility that a resulting foal could be a grulla or a crème dilute grulla. If either or both of the parents are color tested, the percentages would be simple to calculate. Examination of the parents, grandparents and any offspring produced would shed light on what the true possibilities are for this mating.
A smokey grulla is a black horse with a dun gene, and a cream gene.
The word you are looking for is "buckskin." Buckskin is a term used to describe a horse's coat color that is yellowish brown with a dorsal stripe along the back.
Because a horse's skin is either black, grey o r chestnut, that depends on the horse colour, so the horse colour is going to be a mix between them or one of them.
Spirit, Stallion of the Cimmaron's coat is dun.
Tricolored generally means a bay with white. If the stallion is homozygous for dun but has produced red dun foals...the foal could be dun, or red dun. If the mare and stallion carry the a (black) gene they could produce a grulla. The presence of spotting will depend on the genetics of the mare. If she is homozygous for the tobiano gene the foal will be tobiano and some color of dun. Heterozygous tobiano or frame overo the foal will be dun and spotted 50% of the time. If the mare is a tovero (carries the frame and tobiano genes) the foal will have a high chance of tobiano or overo patterning. Sabino spotting patterns could be present in the stallion with no real apparent signs and if the mare have sabino genetics...white patterning could vary considerably. If the stallion is heterozygous for dun and the mare is heterozygous for tobiano or overo...color and white patterns as well as solid non dun coloring is possible.
It is 'horse' in Dutch.Horse Isle Answer: Dutch ~CaptainQuiche (Dun Server)SpottyChinchilla from dun was here.
Dun can be red dun, blue dun or dun. If we assume that the dun is A-Dndn or A-DnDn We know the palomino is --eeCrcr 50% of the foals have the Crème allele and therefore be dilute. 50% of the foals (if the Dun parent is heterozygous Dndn) will have the Dun allele. If the dun parent is homozygous dun DnDn all foals produced will be dun. If the Dun horse is A-Dndn and Ee at the extension site. 50% of the foals will be red based. This could be chestnut, red dun, dunalino (palomino and dun), 50% will be non-red. This could be bay, dun, dunskin (dun and buckskin) If the Dun horse is A-DnDn and Ee at the extension site. 50% of the foals will be red dun or dunalino 50% of the foals will be dun or dunskin. If both the stallion and the mare carry the true black allele a there is the possibility that a resulting foal could be a grulla or a crème dilute grulla. If either or both of the parents are color tested, the percentages would be simple to calculate. Examination of the parents, grandparents and any offspring produced would shed light on what the true possibilities are for this mating.
Sounds like this may be a description of a red dun horse (a chestnut horse with the dun gene). Many breeds have the dun gene, mustangs and quarter horses are examples.
A lot of people consider Spirit as a "DUN". From what I know he is a BUCKSKIN. Buckskins are a tan shade with black mane & tail. Honestly, if you think Spirit is a dun... ROFL!
There are no Mediterranean countries that start with 'Dun' or a 'D'.
Its kinda like ya know la. like sorta a like sinnging note thing. you know how people go la la la la la la la? well some people go dun dun dun dun dun dun. that's da only definition i know, but go on dictionary.com and type in dun
There is no mix. That's why it has it's own name. The color is just dun.
Dun is a color not a breed. Duns come in all shapes and sizes. They can be as small as a pony or as big as a draft horse. So it is imposssible to tell what the horse will weigh unless you know how big he is.
You breed a dun horse the same way you would breed all others - a horses color does not change the way they need to be bred, the only thing you would need done specially is if your horse has problems - previous breeding complications, tissue scarring, infections - but you would need to see your vet about those implications.
Well, basically, dun has a dorsal stripe and a darker muzzle but they are pretty much the same.