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[horse=1234]Horses Name[/horse]
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[horse=1234]Horses Name[/horse]
This will display the most recent photo of the horse as well as a link to him.

What color is this horse?
Hi, I thing this horse is a grey snowflake appaloosa, but I'm not sure. Does anyone know?
Flicker's Ridge

Flicker's Ridge

BlackOak2 Offline
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Re: What color is this horse?
Grey denotes the graying gene. He doesn't have that. What you're seeing is the varnish gene, that is responsible for his silvering over his body and also his silvering of his mane and tail.onyxthehorse wrote:Hi, I thing this horse is a grey snowflake appaloosa, but I'm not sure. Does anyone know?

Your horse is on a black-base, in this case Bay. He also has the dun gene (see his yearling photo, you'll see stripes on his legs). And also tiger eye (green eyes, in his case, they're shifted to the gray spectrum).
I would pose his color as bay dun blanket with tiger eye.
He is quite the looker.

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Re: What color is this horse?
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What about this horse?
What about this horse?

Re: What color is this horse?
It's hard to tell because there are no pictures of her when she was younger, so I'm not sure if she's bay or chestnut, but whatever the base is there's snowflakes, tigereye, a blanket, and greying over itonyxthehorse wrote:Suspect
What about this horse?
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Re: What color is this horse?
I agree. I think she's a greying blanket bay dun with snowflakes.shadowheart2006 wrote:It's hard to tell because there are no pictures of her when she was younger, so I'm not sure if she's bay or chestnut, but whatever the base is there's snowflakes, tigereye, a blanket, and greying over itonyxthehorse wrote:Suspect
What about this horse?


Re: What color is this horse?
Just one thing I disagree with: leopard and blanket aren't interchangeable. (Near) leopard/fewspot is caused by PATN1, covering at least the torso of the horse to the entire horse and (extended) blanket/snowcap by PATN2 and covers less than the entire torso of the horse - or, at least, people think blanket and leopard are caused by two different genes - even if they aren't, leopard and blanket still aren't interchangeable, even if the line between the two can become blurred.BlackOak2 wrote:Grey denotes the graying gene. He doesn't have that. What you're seeing is the varnish gene, that is responsible for his silvering over his body and also his silvering of his mane and tail.onyxthehorse wrote:Hi, I thing this horse is a grey snowflake appaloosa, but I'm not sure. Does anyone know?He does have leopard, some people call that appaloosa, others will offer 'blanket'. On our game almost every horse that has a blanket will also have some sort of snowflakes (it's almost impossible to separate the two through breeding).
Your horse is on a black-base, in this case Bay. He also has the dun gene (see his yearling photo, you'll see stripes on his legs). And also tiger eye (green eyes, in his case, they're shifted to the gray spectrum).
I would pose his color as bay dun blanket with tiger eye.
He is quite the looker.

Re: What color is this horse?
Her eyes look blue - I would lean more towards calling her a tiger eye grey on dunskin blanket.h0rsey wrote:I agree. I think she's a greying blanket bay dun with snowflakes.shadowheart2006 wrote:
It's hard to tell because there are no pictures of her when she was younger, so I'm not sure if she's bay or chestnut, but whatever the base is there's snowflakes, tigereye, a blanket, and greying over it

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Re: What color is this horse?
To be clear, in this statement: 'He does have leopard, some people call that appaloosa, others will offer 'blanket'.'Malakai10 wrote:Just one thing I disagree with: leopard and blanket aren't interchangeable. (Near) leopard/fewspot is caused by PATN1, covering at least the torso of the horse to the entire horse and (extended) blanket/snowcap by PATN2 and covers less than the entire torso of the horse - or, at least, people think blanket and leopard are caused by two different genes - even if they aren't, leopard and blanket still aren't interchangeable, even if the line between the two can become blurred.BlackOak2 wrote:
Grey denotes the graying gene. He doesn't have that. What you're seeing is the varnish gene, that is responsible for his silvering over his body and also his silvering of his mane and tail.He does have leopard, some people call that appaloosa, others will offer 'blanket'. On our game almost every horse that has a blanket will also have some sort of snowflakes (it's almost impossible to separate the two through breeding).
Your horse is on a black-base, in this case Bay. He also has the dun gene (see his yearling photo, you'll see stripes on his legs). And also tiger eye (green eyes, in his case, they're shifted to the gray spectrum).
I would pose his color as bay dun blanket with tiger eye.
He is quite the looker.
When I said the word 'leopard' I was referring to him having the leopard gene and not the leopard pattern. However, I can see how that can be mistaken.
And I agree with what you said, leopard (full or false) and it's fewspot sibling is NOT the same as blanket (extended or otherwise Not full leopard) or snowcap and the otherwise fewspot sibling of the blanket. That also offers a difference in PATN1 and PATN2... but doesn't describe a difference between them when PATN2 can become a false leopard. Until we have gene testing, the theory between PATN1 and PATN2 on this game will remain simply a theory. And so a true leopard and a false leopard will still remain nominally unproven... and that irritates me a bit.

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Re: What color is this horse?
In the case of this second horse... I agree with the aforementioned colors (and the tiger eye as well), with the sole exception of the base color. I suspect that this horse is red and not black. The lack of the black nose is a tell-tale hint that the mare is likely red. But... without any foal pictures at least, only by breeding to a hetrozygous black will reveal if this horse is truly red or not and only if this horse ever pops another red foal.h0rsey wrote:I agree. I think she's a greying blanket bay dun with snowflakes.shadowheart2006 wrote:
It's hard to tell because there are no pictures of her when she was younger, so I'm not sure if she's bay or chestnut, but whatever the base is there's snowflakes, tigereye, a blanket, and greying over it
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Re: What color is this horse?
That makes sense now - I tend just to use varnish roan for Lp to avoid confusionBlackOak2 wrote:To be clear, in this statement: 'He does have leopard, some people call that appaloosa, others will offer 'blanket'.'Malakai10 wrote: Just one thing I disagree with: leopard and blanket aren't interchangeable. (Near) leopard/fewspot is caused by PATN1, covering at least the torso of the horse to the entire horse and (extended) blanket/snowcap by PATN2 and covers less than the entire torso of the horse - or, at least, people think blanket and leopard are caused by two different genes - even if they aren't, leopard and blanket still aren't interchangeable, even if the line between the two can become blurred.
When I said the word 'leopard' I was referring to him having the leopard gene and not the leopard pattern. However, I can see how that can be mistaken.
And I agree with what you said, leopard (full or false) and it's fewspot sibling is NOT the same as blanket (extended or otherwise Not full leopard) or snowcap and the otherwise fewspot sibling of the blanket. That also offers a difference in PATN1 and PATN2... but doesn't describe a difference between them when PATN2 can become a false leopard. Until we have gene testing, the theory between PATN1 and PATN2 on this game will remain simply a theory. And so a true leopard and a false leopard will still remain nominally unproven... and that irritates me a bit.
And, yeah, we'll definitely be rather glad to get gene testing!
Are we able to breed PATN2 so extensively that it looks like leopard? ... do we even know if we actually have PATN1 if that's the case? Are all of our 'leopards' actually just really, really extended blankets?