Equine Grey Progression Guide by MistyofSunrise, journal
Equine Grey Progression Guide
Writing & examples by MistyofSunrise (https://www.deviantart.com/mistyofsunrise)
free lineart by BH-Stables (https://www.deviantart.com/bh-stables)
Since grey is one of those tricky genes (especially since your favorite equine seems to be constantly changing in appearance ;)) I thought I would throw together a little guide based on my own research and observation. Hopefully this will be helpful as you design and/or age your equines! :D
Grey is a dominant gene, so every horse that carries even one grey (G) gene WILL grey - no exception. There is no evidence to prove that there is any difference between homozygous (GG) and heterozygous (nG) in how they grey and how fast the process goes. Family line seems to have mor
Royal Manchado, a TB stallion.
At times the colorful thoroughbred can be a bit confusing, but never more so than when Manchado, which translates as stained, comes into the picture. Often times you can find this color under Overos Manchado when doing research. This unique sabino/overo like pattern is currently found in four breeds: Criollo, Arabian, Thoroughbred, and Hackney. And only when the horse has originated in Argentina. It's important to know that the horse above, Royal Manchado was named for the coloration. While being new to the US, Manchado has existed for centuries in Argentina.
Pattern Information
Manchado is incredibly differe
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