enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Buckskin (horse) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckskin_(horse)

    Buckskin New Forest pony This sooty buckskin exhibits the slightly paler brown eyes common in buckskins Undiluted bay and buckskin horse abreast. Buckskin is a colour of horse (sometimes misunderstood as a breed). Buckskins coloring is a hair coat color referring to a color that resembles certain shades of tanned deerskin. Similar colors in ...

  3. Equine coat color genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_coat_color_genetics

    Before domestication, horses are thought to have had these coat colors. [1] Equine coat color genetics determine a horse's coat color. Many colors are possible, but all variations are produced by changes in only a few genes. Bay is the most common color of horse, [2] followed by black and chestnut.

  4. Cream gene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cream_gene

    The cream gene is responsible for a number of horse coat colors. Horses that have the cream gene in addition to a base coat color that is chestnut will become palomino if they are heterozygous, having one copy of the cream gene, or cremello, if they are homozygous. Similarly, horses with a bay base coat and the cream gene will be buckskin or ...

  5. Equine coat color - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_coat_color

    The word "points" is given to the mane, tail, lower legs, and ear rims with respect to horse coloration. The overall name given to a horse coat color depends on the color of both the points and the body. For example, bay horses have a reddish-brown body with black points. [3] Point coloration is most often produced by the action of the agouti gene.

  6. List of horse breeds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_horse_breeds

    The best-known "color breed" registries that accept horses from many different breeds are for the following colors: Buckskin: a color which cannot breed "true" due to the cream gene which creates it being an incomplete dominant; Palomino: a color which cannot breed "true" due to the cream gene which creates it being an incomplete dominant

  7. How are racehorses named? How fast do they run ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/racehorses-named-fast-run-answering...

    Owners have to get creative with horse names, since no two horses can share a name, according to the the Jockey Club rule book. Name also can't be longer than 18 characters, including spaces, and ...

  8. One man and a filly horse named Regret made the Kentucky ...

    www.aol.com/one-man-filly-horse-names-110200200.html

    The 1913 Kentucky Derby has long been remembered for its improbable winner, Donerail, still the longest priced horse to ever win the Run for the Roses—paying $184.90 on a $2 dollar ticket.What ...

  9. Palomino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palomino

    Horses with a very dark brown coat but a flaxen mane and tail are sometimes called "chocolate palomino", and some palomino color registries accept horses of such color. However, this coloring is not genetically palomino. There are two primary ways the color is created. The best-known is a liver chestnut with a flaxen mane and tail. The genetics ...