well my man's passport was issued at 1 yr old and it says black. which i suppose he prob almost was, tho you would have thought there would have at least been a twinge of grey. not sure what happens with his freezemark as that has come thru white, which shows fine at the mo, but surely it wont if he goes white in yrs to come????
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well my man's passport was issued at 1 yr old and it says black. which i suppose he prob almost was, tho you would have thought there would have at least been a twinge of grey. not sure what happens with his freezemark as that has come thru white, which shows fine at the mo, but surely it wont if he goes white in yrs to come????
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Just confirms my opinion as to how useless passports are
I am looking at a rose grey and would be gutted if she went white.
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What you have to remember is that grey is NOT a colour, it is an effect on a colour. It is progressive and the horse is born the colour it would have been has it not inherited the grey gene.
A rose grey will not stay rose grey but will progressively get lighter and lighter until it is either pure or almost white. Sirena was actually born a dun, then went rose grey and is now white.
This filly is very chocolate at the moment but is just a yearling, she will also eventually be white
Yup, I'm afraid rose greys go white too - mine certainly has!!!! The grey in my siggy was a deep rose grey when I got her but she's even whiter than in my siggy now!
Steel greys do 9/10 end up going almost white (obv not whitej ust really pale grey)
and on passports they should just say "grey" tones of colours are not allowed on passports (so steel grey, dappled grey, fleabitten grey etc are not allowed)
Its either grey, brown, black, etc