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Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by Silverine »
Just watch - one days she'll come in red with white spots because she rolled in clay and then somehow found white paint to get into.BlackOak2 wrote: HAH! She'll come in every day for dinner and you won't recognize her... She'll be bay one day, brown the next... Dunnish when she rolls in the sand...
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by BlackOak2 »
That poor filly... such a mess!Silverine wrote:Just watch - one days she'll come in red with white spots because she rolled in clay and then somehow found white paint to get into.BlackOak2 wrote: HAH! She'll come in every day for dinner and you won't recognize her... She'll be bay one day, brown the next... Dunnish when she rolls in the sand...
I actually knew at least one horse much like that. Hated to be washed and would foam up the mud-hole before rolling in it. And of course, he was a gray.
He did it so much that whenever he wouldn't, the barn manager would be checking his temp and health. There were a couple times he was in fact, running a fever. Apparently, he suffered from dust allergies or something in the hay occasionally.
Still, I wonder what the drive is?
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by Silverine »
Far-fetched, but I wonder if it isn't a camouflage reflex for the greys. The grey stands out against the other colors, so without other protection factors (like humans and fences) they would be more vulnerable than the other horses.BlackOak2 wrote: That poor filly... such a mess!
I actually knew at least one horse much like that. Hated to be washed and would foam up the mud-hole before rolling in it. And of course, he was a gray.
He did it so much that whenever he wouldn't, the barn manager would be checking his temp and health. There were a couple times he was in fact, running a fever. Apparently, he suffered from dust allergies or something in the hay occasionally.
Still, I wonder what the drive is?
I knew a grey at a summer camp where I was a counselor who would come in every day with one of his sides completely orange. Our theory was that he slept on his side in the mud. The side changed from day-to-day, but as long as there was mud he came in half chestnut.
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by BlackOak2 »
That is an excellent theory. The other one I was thinking was sunscreen and bugscreen, like some other animals do.Silverine wrote: Far-fetched, but I wonder if it isn't a camouflage reflex for the greys. The grey stands out against the other colors, so without other protection factors (like humans and fences) they would be more vulnerable than the other horses.
I knew a grey at a summer camp where I was a counselor who would come in every day with one of his sides completely orange. Our theory was that he slept on his side in the mud. The side changed from day-to-day, but as long as there was mud he came in half chestnut.
Itchy skin can't account for all of it. But then again... with 'our' breeding practices... maybe it can.
Are you having trouble saving images? I keep saving images but some of them don't end up in the galleries when I go back. It's unusually annoying and rampant today.
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by Silverine »
I had the sunscreen thought as well. It makes sense for the pink-skinned, light-colored horses, but a lot of greys have black skin. Bugscreen makes sense, too.BlackOak2 wrote: That is an excellent theory. The other one I was thinking was sunscreen and bugscreen, like some other animals do.
Itchy skin can't account for all of it. But then again... with 'our' breeding practices... maybe it can.
Are you having trouble saving images? I keep saving images but some of them don't end up in the galleries when I go back. It's unusually annoying and rampant today.
Ugh, itchy skin. My horse gets some sort of fungus on his tail head every summer and if I don't catch it in time he rubs the top of his tail out on the fence. One year he rubbed it so much that he rubbed the pigment out of it so he now has white hairs in his tail.
Not today. I've previously had some issues with it, but none recently.
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by BlackOak2 »
I'm also now wondering if (since apparently a lot of grays eventually develop melanoma skin cancers), if these spots develop itchiness as a pre-warning type of thing.Silverine wrote:
I had the sunscreen thought as well. It makes sense for the pink-skinned, light-colored horses, but a lot of greys have black skin. Bugscreen makes sense, too.
Ugh, itchy skin. My horse gets some sort of fungus on his tail head every summer and if I don't catch it in time he rubs the top of his tail out on the fence. One year he rubbed it so much that he rubbed the pigment out of it so he now has white hairs in his tail.
Not today. I've previously had some issues with it, but none recently.
I rode a horse that did that to their tail too. Except it was year round. Baby oil was my remedy, but that was just dry skin.
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by Silverine »
I have no idea. Most of the horses I deal with aren't grey. There were a bunch at that summer camp, but I was only there for three months. XDBlackOak2 wrote: I'm also now wondering if (since apparently a lot of grays eventually develop melanoma skin cancers), if these spots develop itchiness as a pre-warning type of thing.
I rode a horse that did that to their tail too. Except it was year round. Baby oil was my remedy, but that was just dry skin.
Yeah, my guy is fungus. T_T I usually use MTG. It keeps the fungus down and helps the hair grow.
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by BlackOak2 »
I didn't know about the connection until I worked for a retired TB breeder. She said that something about the genes that cause the gray color, has some sort of a deficiency or something that mutates too easily into skin cancers. She also said that very few gray lines exist that don't have the same problem, but as far as she knew, they hadn't yet figured out what the difference was between the gray lines that didn't mutate and those that did.Silverine wrote:
I have no idea. Most of the horses I deal with aren't grey. There were a bunch at that summer camp, but I was only there for three months. XD
Yeah, my guy is fungus. T_T I usually use MTG. It keeps the fungus down and helps the hair grow.
Who knew?
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by Silverine »
Huh. Very interesting. Makes me glad that 1) I tend to avoid grey because it's harder to keep clean and 2) we don't have to worry about that in-game.BlackOak2 wrote: I didn't know about the connection until I worked for a retired TB breeder. She said that something about the genes that cause the gray color, has some sort of a deficiency or something that mutates too easily into skin cancers. She also said that very few gray lines exist that don't have the same problem, but as far as she knew, they hadn't yet figured out what the difference was between the gray lines that didn't mutate and those that did.
Who knew?
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Re: Leopard Patterns - Information and open discussion
Post by BlackOak2 »
Not in-game Yet.Silverine wrote:
Huh. Very interesting. Makes me glad that 1) I tend to avoid grey because it's harder to keep clean and 2) we don't have to worry about that in-game.
But at the rate we're progressing, it looks like it'll be quite a few more years before we get to that point.
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