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Greys
  • What makes a horse grey out to completely white vs. fleabitten? Is it the same thing in game and in reality? My 2 grey mares go through varying stages of fleabitten-ness, but I don't expect either of them will white completely. Right?

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  • Grey horses wont completly go white. Gray or grey is a coat color of horses characterized by progressive silvering of the colored hairs of the coat.[1] Most gray horses have black skin and dark eyes; unlike many depigmentation genes, gray does not affect skin or eye color[1] Their adult hair coat is white, dappled, or white intermingled with hairs of other colors. Gray horses may be born any base color, depending on other color genes present. White hairs begin to appear at or shortly after birth and become progressively lighter as the horse ages. Graying can occur at different rates—very quickly on one horse and very slowly on another.


    People who are unfamiliar with horses may refer to gray horses as "white." However, a gray horse whose hair coat is completely "white" will still have black skin (except under markings that were white at birth) and dark eyes. This is how to discern a gray horse from a white horse. White horses usually have pink skin and sometimes even have blue eyes. Young horses with hair coats consisting of a mixture of colored and gray or white hairs are sometimes confused with roan. Some horses that carry dilution genes may also be confused with white or gray.
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  • I don't have time to make a huge post but the short of it is gray causes tons of pigment to be made. That mass amount of pigment overwhelms the pigment storage cells and that kills them. The horse still makes pigment but it just can't get into the hair shaft anymore causing it to turn white. As a horse gets older some areas can regrow and start accepting pigment again this causes fleabites where little colonies of color storage cells come back. Fleabites happen almost exclusively on heterozygous grays. Homozygous tend to gray out faster and stay that way.

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