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Silver buckskin

  • Writer: Lesli Kathman
    Lesli Kathman
  • Sep 11, 2010
  • 1 min read

This post is archived from the Blackberry Lane studio blog


an aged Rocky Mountain Horse with a silver and cream diluted coat

One of the best places to find horses with unusual coloring is on trail rides. In many breeds, traditional colors dominate the show ring, but among the horses used for pleasure riding, there is often a lot more variation. That is what I was hoping to find at the recent Latta Plantation Poker Run. I got there a little too early to see many horses, but I did get these pictures of “Peaches”, a Rocky Mountain Horse.


I wanted to share her because she is a really good example of what happens to silver dilutes with age. Peaches is a buckskin silver, and according to her owner, she is seventeen. I apologize for the extreme in perspective (my camera has been out of whack in that regard for a while), but I wanted to show just how dark her tail was. Pale manes and tails tend to darken with age, and silvers are no exception. It is not unusual to find an aged silver with a tail almost indistinguishable from a non-diluted horse of the same color. The manes usually keep their lighter ends, but it might be a stretch to call them flaxen. It could also be easily mistaken for sun-fading.


a close-up of the head of a silver and cream diluted Rocky Mountain Horse

Peaches also had a really cool trait that seems to be more common in horses carrying two separate dilution genes (silver and cream in this case), but it can be found in horses without any dilution at all. That is a hazel eye.


a close-up of the amber eye of a silver buckskin horse


 
 

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