MiLo Minis said:
Her sire, Bobby, is smoky black, carries the cream gene, as he has produced palominos with mares that are not dilute. I don't believe Lacey, the dam, is dilute - I believe she is silver bay roan. Mary Ann is not great at colours
which she admits.
Well, technically Lace is still a double dilute in that case as both roan and silver are dilution genes just like cream.
I do wonder what is keeping the color off her head though- silver bay or silver buckskin roans should still have dark faces!
studiowvw said:
Wow, I had no idea there was so much to know about colouring! Here is a pic of her in her full winter coat last winter before I got her - it is a pic that Mary Ann sent me when I was inquiring about her.
Ohhhh yes. She's silver bay roan- no question! She's a textbook example.
studiowvw said:
I wondered why that wouldn't be called palomino! But then she shed out and was definitely silver and had the dark leg areas, also some dark in her mane and tail. Silver bay roan sounds pretty cool! Wonder what colour a foal would be off her?
Silver is a funny thing. It doesn't refer to the silver color of the body (only silver buckskins actually
are a silvery color) but to the tell-tale pattern of dilution it causes. Black horses with the silver gene are a pewter or brownish tone usually with a white mane and tail and silver bays look a lot like flaxen chestnuts as their black manes and tails are diluted to a silvery white and their legs diluted to almost their regular body color. Silver buckskins for some reason manage to keep their darker manes and tails but instead of having black points they are a chocolate brown color and the golden body is diluted to a silvery tone. At least some of them are- that color has the most variations I think I've ever seen on a double dilute! Perlinos are always going to look one particular way, same with smoky blacks, etc., but silver buckskins can be anything from the above to a strange tawny color all over including yellow manes and tails. It's a weird shade! The giveaway with Lacey was the fact that her head remained a dark body shade along with her mane, tail and legs. That's the hallmark of a true roan.
Her "silver" body tone is actually the roan at work. Where you see the silver gene is in her mane, tail and legs.
She could produce a lot of different colors depending on what you bred her to. The baby could inherit none of the dilution genes and be a solid black, chestnut or bay. If it got the roan gene it could be a blue, red/strawberry or bay roan. If it got silver but not roan it could be a silver dapple, normal looking chestnut or silver bay. If it got both like mom it could be a silver blue roan, silver red roan (would look just like a normal strawberry roan) or a silver bay roan like Lacey. Then you throw in the sire and the baby could add appaloosa, pinto, or another set of dilution genes to the mix!
Turbo's dam is a silver dapple, his sire a buckskin minimal pinto, Turbo is a silver buckskin with not a spot of white and his full brother from this year is a black and white pinto.
Mini colors are amazing!
Minimor said:
Having seen Lacey's dam in person I would say that she is a silver buckskin--the roan is not obvious (at least not to me) but she must be a roan to be producing roans--her sire is a bay roan. I have foal photos of Lacey on my old computer, not on this one--when I saw her as a foal she did look like a silver buckskin, not a silver bay. However, in the photo Mary Ann has on her sold page, Lacey does look like a silver bay roan.
Do you know what Lace's dam was if her sire was a bay roan? If she wasn't a buckskin, palomino or smoky black then we'll have our answer.
This is fun! I can't wait to see the videos of Lacey when I get home.
Leia