White covering grey gene???
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Tap The Mint
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White covering grey gene???
I have an interesting topic I think. We bred our bay Sabino mare to The White Fox and got a beautiful chestnut colt with four white stockings. I noticed when he was first born that he had a 'sparkly' appearance and white hairs around his eyes and nostrils. He is now just a little over a month old and showing grey hair on his eyelids and nose and face so is obviously 'greying out'. I don't know if The White Fox has any other grey foals but I'm thinking that the grey could be carried through his dam, Patchen Beauty (white) by Hatchet Man (grey). Does this mean that the white color overrides the grey and could this colt theoretically throw white foals in the future? Jorge, your thoughts please!
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At some point during her development, Iroquois Priestess seemed like some sort of gray filly. In fact, even today (please see her pedigree photo) her mane and tail looks more like belonging to a gray equine than to any other color. But we all know she is not carrying the gray genotype. Perhaps something similar may be occurring with some of these "seudo-looking" grays cases.
http://www.pedigreequery.com/iroquois+priestess
http://www.pedigreequery.com/iroquois+priestess
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- angrovestud
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Sabino 1 gene greys out my firend had a chesnut and white and he has a coloured head chesnut, and a splash of chestnut over his rump and a chestnut tail this was when he was a foal, by the time he was two all he had left was a chesnut head and forelock everything else including his tail had gone white.
A coloured leaving its mark
Angrove stud breeding your racing colours
I am dyslexic it can be funny!

Angrove stud breeding your racing colours
I am dyslexic it can be funny!

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SB1 DOESN'T gray out. Graying and roaning (that SB1 can cause) are completely different things.
If your friends horse was a max white, he most likely ROANED out the rest of the way, NOT gray.
If your friends horse was a max white, he most likely ROANED out the rest of the way, NOT gray.
Check out my Equine Genetics blog! Updated April 25th with Splashed White!!!
http://equinegenetics.blogspot.com/
http://equinegenetics.blogspot.com/
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RiddleMeThis wrote:SB1 DOESN'T gray out. Graying and roaning (that SB1 can cause) are completely different things.
If your friends horse was a max white, he most likely ROANED out the rest of the way, NOT gray.
I think Angrove used 'grey out' as a generic term, rather than meaning the horse carried the grey gene.
But I agree you should explain this so others understand
I'd love to understand more on the sabino roaning?..you say it's the SB1 thats causes it...if the TB doesn't carry SB1 why do some max white TB's fade? and is it the same for DW? Thanks
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SB1 can cause roaning. It doesn't always, but it is one of the features they used to help them identify SB1.Truly wrote:I'd love to understand more on the sabino roaning?..you say it's the SB1 thats causes it...if the TB doesn't carry SB1 why do some max white TB's fade? and is it the same for DW? Thanks
Most of the TBs that we have called Max White really ARENT Max White but are rather DW. Sabinos of any type appear to be able to cause roaning.
DW is kinda hit or miss. Sometimes it will roan it out, and then other times it doesn't. The AA line who is almost assuredly DW appears to roan out less often than the Puchi line does, but it varies,
Hope that helped!
Check out my Equine Genetics blog! Updated April 25th with Splashed White!!!
http://equinegenetics.blogspot.com/
http://equinegenetics.blogspot.com/
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I was under the impression that roan horses did not "roan" out. I've seen roans (other breeds) that never changed color. They were born with dark heads and legs and white scattered through the body base coat and stayed that way. They don't dapple, either. Tbreds don't have the roan gene, except several offspring of Catch A Bird, an Australian Tbred with a mutation.
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