I'm pretty sure it's color genetics. Gray is so weirdly awesome![]()
Ohhh okay. Yeah, it seems like there's so many different greys
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I'm pretty sure it's color genetics. Gray is so weirdly awesome![]()
I know right!!!Ohhh okay. Yeah, it seems like there's so many different greys
I know right!!!
Quote: Actually, there's only one. A genetic gray horse is born with the cells that put color in its hair on overdrive, so foals are usually born with unusually intense color (a normal black foal is born a sort of dark gray color, and it turns black when it molts out its foal coat. A black-based genetic gray horse is born a deep, intense black). As the gray horse ages, the color producing cells burn out, and the horse starts getting white hairs intermixed with whatever color it is. A gray that is homozygous (inherited two copies of the gene for gray) may turn completely white by the time it is 4 or 5 years old, though most horses take longer than that. Most of the "dappled gray" horses that you see are genetic grays, and eventually will turn completely white, or maybe fleabitten gray (white with little reddish freckles).
There is one other color that can sometimes look like a dappled gray; that's a color known as a silver black. Silvers usually have very light (almost white) manes, and their bodies most of the time are chocolate colored, but occasionally they may be more gray than brown. If in doubt, look at the mane. A gray horse with a dark mane is a genetic gray, and it will be turning whiter and whiter as it ages. A silver black will have a whitish mane with a colored body, and will stay more or less that color all of its life.
Yes, Lancer, Khenny & Oran are all Arabs. My family is deeply rooted in Morgans... but I had to be a rebellious teen and get an Arab instead, and have stayed with Arabs ever since. Well, except Rascal.
Gray horse genetics always start out "dark" and get lighter and lighter as they age. They don't all progress to fully white, and they don't all go through a rose gray stage. None of the stages last long... I typed wrong on my original post... Lancer was born BAY and was BLACK at ~2 yrs of age, and had progressed thru rose-gray by 6 years and lost all his dapples by his late teens. His mane & tail stayed black until his late teens, also, but turned 100% snow white by his early 20's.
People don't always realize what a lifelong commitment horses can really be... and that they get EXTREMELY expensive to keep, the older they get. Rascal and Lancer have been "toothless" for almost a decade now, and rely on more and more and more soaked feed to keep their weight up. A $25 bag of feed (50lbs) barely lasts me about 2 days. So ~20 bags of feed a month = $500 in feed. And then there are supplements...
Actually, there's only one. A genetic gray horse is born with the cells that put color in its hair on overdrive, so foals are usually born with unusually intense color (a normal black foal is born a sort of dark gray color, and it turns black when it molts out its foal coat. A black-based genetic gray horse is born a deep, intense black). As the gray horse ages, the color producing cells burn out, and the horse starts getting white hairs intermixed with whatever color it is. A gray that is homozygous (inherited two copies of the gene for gray) may turn completely white by the time it is 4 or 5 years old, though most horses take longer than that. Most of the "dappled gray" horses that you see are genetic grays, and eventually will turn completely white, or maybe fleabitten gray (white with little reddish freckles).
There is one other color that can sometimes look like a dappled gray; that's a color known as a silver black. Silvers usually have very light (almost white) manes, and their bodies most of the time are chocolate colored, but occasionally they may be more gray than brown. If in doubt, look at the mane. A gray horse with a dark mane is a genetic gray, and it will be turning whiter and whiter as it ages. A silver black will have a whitish mane with a colored body, and will stay more or less that color all of its life.
Oh my goodness. The oldies pull at my heart strings. I can't handle it.
And 40 is amazing! He looks great.
I'm so sorry about Khenny, he was absolutely beautiful. Not fair at all that he had to go that young.
Here's my grey, well not mine anymore, but he was dark when he was young then a beautiful dapple, so very typical.
And now I'm sad
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Sometimes I think about June being old one day and I cry lol same with my dog
Poor old girl. I'm gonna keep my stubborn old lady til she dies - which will probably mean I'll have to get a house when I move outOld horses are always the best! An old friend of my grandpa's had a horse who was 36 and could still he ridden hard, I've heard it was a fiesty horse even through its old age.
I think my aunt has a horse how is 33ish he used to be a jumper if i am correct.
When our older mare is ready to go i will do the right thing. The best thing for a horse in its last few years is to let it go out to pasture. I felt so guilty when i had to ride her at our branding. I know she enjoyed chasing cows, but shes not physically able to do that anymore, and now she hates me for it.![]()