Horses With The Most Unique And Beautiful Coats In The World (They Are So Majestic!)
Horses come in a huge variety of colors. The most common horse coat colors are chestnut, bay, and grey. Paints, buckskins, and palominos are less common, but you still see them every now and again.
Some of the horses on this list have coats that are totally unique. Keep reading to see some of the beautiful and unique horses.
Does This Pinto Horse Remind You Of Another Animal?
We're going to start with a basic horse coat color. This is a pinto. A pinto horse has a coat that's partly white and partly another darker color. They almost resemble cows when they're black and white or brown and white.
Sometimes these horses are called "paints," but, fun fact, not all paints are pintos. Some are mixed breeds with pinto coloring. Most paints are actually part quarter horse or part thoroughbred.
The Sabino Gene Is Quite Unique
"Sabino" refers to a specific spotting pattern that appears on horses' coats. The spotting is always white and it's produced by a specific gene known as the Sabino 1 gene. There is actually a DNA test to find out if a horse is truly a sabino, or if it's just a roan. We'll see roan horses later on in this article.
Sabino horses only roan in certain areas of their skin— usually around the face and belly. Roan horses have white fur all throughout their coats.
A Red Roan Isn't Really Red
This beauty is a red roan quarter horse. You can tell it's a quarter horse because of its well developed muscular hind end (AKA butt). A roan is a solid colored horse that has some white fur intermingled with its base coat.
Red roans have a chestnut base coat, but all those little white fur can make them look almost pinkish. They still have solid brown manes and tails, though.
This Perlino Is Enjoying The Sun A Bit Too Much
This horse has a perlino coat, which is another way the cream gene manifests itself in horses. Perlinos are homozygous cream bays. They have a bay base coat that's been mutated by the cream gene. Bay horses have brown bodies with black manes and tails, but perlinos have cream-colored bodies with more reddish manes and tails.
It can be hard to tell all of the cream colored horses apart from each other, which is why a DNA test is sometimes necessary.
Palominos Are The Barbies Of The Horse World
Palominos are super glamorous horses. They're characterized by a golden tan coat and a blonde or white mane and tail. Like cremellos, palominos owe their coloring to the cream gene.
Palominos are pretty rare compared to common coated horses like chestnuts and bays. The palomino coat is actually a genetic variation on a chestnut coat, but straight chestnut coats are much more common than palomino coats. Some palominos are quite dark, and some are blonder.
These Horses Are Called Leopard Appaloosas For A Reason
As we already know, appaloosa horses come in all different shapes and sizes. These are leopard appaloosas. Leopard appaloosas are white horses with dark spots that cover their entire bodies, including below their knees.
Like most other appaloosas, they have prominent scleras, which means you can see the white part of their eyes when their eyes are open and at rest. These appaloosas also have mottled manes and tails. They kind of look like overgrown dalmatians.
Flaxen Manes Always Stand Out
Horses with flaxen manes have manes and tails that are lighter in color than their bodies. This horse has a chestnut coat, a flaxen mane and tail, and a stripe on his face.
A "stripe" is a white face marking on a horse that extends down its nose. This horse has a star and a stripe that are connected. A "star" is a white face marking that appears as a dot on a horse's forehead.
Champagne Horses Are As Expensive As Their Name Suggests
This is a gold champagne horse. The champagne gene affects a horse's skin rather than its coat. Chestnut horses with the champagne gene almost look blonde because of their light skin. Most horses have dark or black skin, except in areas where they have white markings due to a lack of pigmentation.
If you look closely at this horse's ears you can see that her skin is actually pink all over.
This Rabicano Knows She's Special
Horses with roaning around the top of their tails and around their flanks are known as rabicanos. Sometimes this pattern is called "white tickling." Rabicanos aren't true roans because those little white furs are restricted to certain areas of their body.
Most rabicanos have two-toned tails. The white fur extend down the tail to create a tail that's white on top and brown on the bottom. The word "rabicano" is of Spanish origin. "Rabo" means tail and "cano" means white in Spanish.
This Blue Roan Is Enjoying Her Lunch
A blue roan is similar to a red roan, except instead of having a chestnut base coat, it has a black base coat. That base coat is interspersed with a bunch of little white hairs. The fur usually don't extend into the mane and tail, though.
This blue roan has a black mane and tail, but sometimes blue roans have reddish manes and tails. The white coloring in their coats sometimes can make them look blue in certain lighting.
Dapple Grey Coats Change With Age
This is a dapple grey Arab or Arabian horse. When a horse's coat is referred to as "grey," it actually means that the horse is grey or white. White horses are also called "greys." Most grey horses are born dark or even black, and then they turn white as they get older.
As they turn white, dapple "blooms" appear on their coat. The horse in this photo is probably younger in age because he still has his dapples.
Appaloosas Come In All Shapes And Sizes
Appaloosas are horses with spotted coats. Like roans, Appaloosas are a combination of a common base coat color and the color of their spots. Darker appaloosas have white spots, and lighter appaloosas have dark spots.
Appaloosa horses also usually have really bright eyes. The whites of their eyes, or their scleras, are visible, which is unique for horses. Appaloosas also have striped hooves, which is a result of their spotted pigmentation extending past their legs.