siennamum
Well-Known Member
my grey was a bay/dun colour when growing up. The vet nevertheless put grey in his passport because he knew the horse would grey out.
Just common sense really.
Just common sense really.
yeah he didn't look blue roan as a baby either did he...
The trouble is even if the PIO's got it right the people who look at them (at competitions, transporters etc) would need proper training to. My big horse's FEI passport says he's chestnut - he's grey - totally white with a handful of chestnut flea bites.
I guess they'd have had to write "chestnut currently but carrying grey genes so will grey out over time" then when he was sold as a chestnut youngster it would have matched for the uneducated and then today would still match. Probably there isn;t that much space on the form tho!!
Not to me no but I suppose he does have white hairs lol - baby fluff...
I wouldn't have let him write something I knew was wrong, lol!![]()
For me this is just another reason why there should be more solid testing done to verify a horse's colour before it is printed forever more on their passport.
Just Chestnut/Grey.
But what use is that to the inexperienced/ non horsey person - even a VOSA person checking you're carrying the right passport might need some kind of help. You might as well leave colour out of the description altogether if you're going to write "he might be brown or he might be white - not sure/ it depends"
http://www.preloved.co.uk/adverts/s...f-youngsters-for-sale-all-priced-to-sell.html
lovely looking bay foal with a buckskin dam yes dad could be a dun in which case the foal is bay dun already I doubt very much he is going to change though. Bit confused to as dams parentage as well as neither clydies nor shires have cream or dun gene
Just jumping on the band wagon here, i have a skewbald that has a fair bit of roaning. Does that make her any different than skwebald. She also does have a few black marks too.
My thoughts exactly Wagtail as well as funny looking shire x clydie.
*hijack alert* been pondering white modifiers and white suppression genes recently wonder if I can pick someones brain.