
Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
Are the markings visible from the moment they're born ?

Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
From what I've seen so far, snowflake can be a little tricky to spot on newborns. I've had some that looked plain as foals but had some snowflakes visible as adults. The other markings you can see easily when they're born.Tigress wrote:Are the markings visible from the moment they're born ?

Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
So best thing is to keep them a while to make sure...thanks allot!

Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
If you're breeding for snowflake, yeah, I would let them age up a little before re-homing just in case. I'm breeding for blanket and that's easy to see on newborns, so I just re-home them straight away if they don't show it.

Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
Ah, I'm so excited.... Now I can refine my Knabstruppers a bit more
!



Ms. Trouble Maker Online
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Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
Awe a little snow cap butt!!! And I think he's gonna be black too!!
http://img.horseworldonline.net/gallery ... db8fc1.png
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Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
Love the new added genes for appaloosa and paint! I just have to wonder if there is (or will be) genes for the more common white markings on the head and legs that a lot of horses have in real life without being paint or appaloosa?

Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
Okay I have a question. If I breed my original horses (without the LP gene) to a horse with spots and the resulting babies have no spots, can I bred those babies to get spots? Are they carrying the gene and not showing it or did they not get the gene?larissar wrote:You can still get patterns by breeding the new ones to the old ones as long as you're breeding a new one with the LP gene. You'll just get very minimal patterns because the old horses don't have any of the pattern genes to pass on.
Sorry for the basic question but I breeding and getting lots with no spots.
Thanks,
QHF

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Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
The babies are likely hiding the new genes they would have inherited them from the spotted parent without inheriting the LP gene to actually turn on the spots. So you can breed these babies back to spotted horses and you'll increase your chance of increase white/spotting.QuesthavenFarms wrote:Okay I have a question. If I breed my original horses (without the LP gene) to a horse with spots and the resulting babies have no spots, can I bred those babies to get spots? Are they carrying the gene and not showing it or did they not get the gene?
Sorry for the basic question but I breeding and getting lots with no spots.
Thanks,
QHF

Re: The Appaloosas Have Arrived!
larissar wrote:
The babies are likely hiding the new genes they would have inherited them from the spotted parent without inheriting the LP gene to actually turn on the spots. So you can breed these babies back to spotted horses and you'll increase your chance of increase white/spotting.
So if they have the LP gene they will always show spots. Breeding two of these unspotted babies (with LP Daddies) to each other will never produce spots until they mate with a horse with spots, right?
Thanks!!!
QHF