Shinx
Well-Known Member
Hi all, I'm hoping some longtime grey owners can give me some advice!
My grey was picture perfect until I introduced him into a herd. He's now as happy as a clam living in a group but he often gets little nicks and marks where the hair is scraped off from playing. I didn't think much of it, until the hair grew back black! He's looking increasingly like a leopard appaloosa. The first few he got grew back in white, it's only the more recent ones that are black, so I'm wondering if it's related to his winter coat. He's also grown in a few black spots where I'm 100% certain he didn't have a scrape or injury.
He also developed fleabites this year for the first time - these are chestnut and much smaller than his new black spots. He's looking a little interesting at the moment!
Grey owners: in your experience will the regrowth change colour with seasonal coat changes? And has anyone seen random black spots on a grey grow in all of a sudden (not fleabites)?
I've never had a grey before and the genetics and colouration are all really fascinating to me!
My grey was picture perfect until I introduced him into a herd. He's now as happy as a clam living in a group but he often gets little nicks and marks where the hair is scraped off from playing. I didn't think much of it, until the hair grew back black! He's looking increasingly like a leopard appaloosa. The first few he got grew back in white, it's only the more recent ones that are black, so I'm wondering if it's related to his winter coat. He's also grown in a few black spots where I'm 100% certain he didn't have a scrape or injury.
He also developed fleabites this year for the first time - these are chestnut and much smaller than his new black spots. He's looking a little interesting at the moment!
Grey owners: in your experience will the regrowth change colour with seasonal coat changes? And has anyone seen random black spots on a grey grow in all of a sudden (not fleabites)?
I've never had a grey before and the genetics and colouration are all really fascinating to me!