Since the gelding currently known as "Chex" has Appaloosa breeding, there's a good possibility that he's one of the Appy patterns known as a varnish roan. Varnish roans are sometimes born solid colored, and get more and more white hairs as they age. They usually retain color on their legs from about the knees down, and often a dark blotch down the middle of their faces, and there may be a few other areas on the body that retain a certain amount of color. Sometimes, varnish may express on top of other Appy patterns, and sometimes they "roan out" to become almost completely white. The high whites and wide blaze make it hard to see if he has the appy characteristics (mottled skin, striped hooves, visible sclera), though sometimes you can get varnish without the characteristics. And to make things really confusing, there are some things that can resemble appy characteristics that really aren't (visible sclera can be the result of pinto patterning, for example).
It's also possible that he's a genetic gray. Genetic grays are born almost any color and get more and more white hairs as they age, sometimes winding up completely white (wouldn't that be odd, a white horse named "Copper?"). With most grays, the white hairs show up around the eyes first; they often go through a phase where there are pronounced dapples on the body.
Though with so much "chrome," it's possible that you have diagnosed correctly, and the white on his body is Sabino roaning. Sabinos may vary a bit from season to season as to how much roaning they show, but it's usually pretty stable; if this guy's white hair count seems to be progressively growing, he's more likely to be one of the above. Of course, if you wind up just training him up a bit and selling him, you may not have him long enough to settle it once and for all in your mind.
I'm not a lot of help on names; whatever name an animal has, I seem to inevitably call 'em "Buddy," or "Baby Girl" when I talk to them.
It's also possible that he's a genetic gray. Genetic grays are born almost any color and get more and more white hairs as they age, sometimes winding up completely white (wouldn't that be odd, a white horse named "Copper?"). With most grays, the white hairs show up around the eyes first; they often go through a phase where there are pronounced dapples on the body.
Though with so much "chrome," it's possible that you have diagnosed correctly, and the white on his body is Sabino roaning. Sabinos may vary a bit from season to season as to how much roaning they show, but it's usually pretty stable; if this guy's white hair count seems to be progressively growing, he's more likely to be one of the above. Of course, if you wind up just training him up a bit and selling him, you may not have him long enough to settle it once and for all in your mind.
I'm not a lot of help on names; whatever name an animal has, I seem to inevitably call 'em "Buddy," or "Baby Girl" when I talk to them.
