Forum rules
You can link to a horse using our new custom BBCode:
[horse=1234]Horses Name[/horse]
This will display the most recent photo of the horse as well as a link to him.
You can link to a horse using our new custom BBCode:
[horse=1234]Horses Name[/horse]
This will display the most recent photo of the horse as well as a link to him.

How did my horse go from being a chestnut to being a what ever color he is now?!
I have a horse named liberty (https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/2694890) that I bought as a foal because I liked his color, and his build. He was a bright chestnut, as you'll see in his gallery, with a blaze, and two socks. Then, slowly he began to turn into an interesting color where he was silver on top, and chestnut on the bottom. I began too lose interest in him, and mainly just kept flipping through the days, just trying to get mares to foal. Very recently I looked back and saw that his color had turned into this:
Liberty

I thought that I would look back at his parents too see if it was something genetic, and what I found made this even more confusing. His sire was a dark bay paint (I think) and his dam was a silvery color. I'm
Liberty
I thought that I would look back at his parents too see if it was something genetic, and what I found made this even more confusing. His sire was a dark bay paint (I think) and his dam was a silvery color. I'm

Re: How did my horse go from being a chestnut to being a what ever color he is now?!
Hi there, liberty is carrying a gray gene (from his dam - she is gray as well, though with the training sheen it looks what you called silveronyxthehorse wrote:I have a horse named liberty (https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/2694890) that I bought as a foal because I liked his color, and his build. He was a bright chestnut, as you'll see in his gallery, with a blaze, and two socks. Then, slowly he began to turn into an interesting color where he was silver on top, and chestnut on the bottom. I began too lose interest in him, and mainly just kept flipping through the days, just trying to get mares to foal. Very recently I looked back and saw that his color had turned into this:
Liberty
I thought that I would look back at his parents too see if it was something genetic, and what I found made this even more confusing. His sire was a dark bay paint (I think) and his dam was a silvery color. I'm

Liberty seems to me a Gray/Fleabitten Chestnut - with either a case of pangaré or varnish (from leopard complex) from his sires side :/ though for varnish it seems a bit to regular in its coverage... and i don't know how varnish/lp interacts with the gray gene - gray horses are always born with a solid adult coat and begin to gray out over the years. Might need a second opinion on this... ^^'
But the gray is easy to name if you know its signs



Re: How did my horse go from being a chestnut to being a what ever color he is now?!
It's easy to tell between a grey foal and a non-grey foal - even from birth.AltNazarach wrote:Hi there, liberty is carrying a gray gene (from his dam - she is gray as well, though with the training sheen it looks what you called silveronyxthehorse wrote:I have a horse named liberty (https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/2694890) that I bought as a foal because I liked his color, and his build. He was a bright chestnut, as you'll see in his gallery, with a blaze, and two socks. Then, slowly he began to turn into an interesting color where he was silver on top, and chestnut on the bottom. I began too lose interest in him, and mainly just kept flipping through the days, just trying to get mares to foal. Very recently I looked back and saw that his color had turned into this:
Liberty
I thought that I would look back at his parents too see if it was something genetic, and what I found made this even more confusing. His sire was a dark bay paint (I think) and his dam was a silvery color. I'm).
Liberty seems to me a Gray/Fleabitten Chestnut - with either a case of pangaré or varnish (from leopard complex) from his sires side :/ though for varnish it seems a bit to regular in its coverage... and i don't know how varnish/lp interacts with the gray gene - gray horses are always born with a solid adult coat and begin to gray out over the years. Might need a second opinion on this... ^^'
But the gray is easy to name if you know its signs
Non-grey foals will always look like they have pangaré and their foal coat is slightly 'dustier' than their adult coat.
For example, observe these horses:
Tiger eye metallic chestnut
Newborn:

Almost 5-years-old:

Tiger eye chestnut
Newborn

Almost 4-years-old:

Tiger eye grey on metallic chestnut
Newborn:

Nearly 5-years-old:

Just over 13-years:

Tiger eye grey on chestnut
Newborn:

Just over 3:

Almost 11:
