X
HGG Community Forums
Log In to HorseGeneticsGame
HGG Community Forums
Join our discord server!
Howdy, Stranger!
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Categories
- All Discussions92,252
- Announcements1,139
- HJ2 Discussion89,342
- ↳ New Member Introductions70
- ↳ Help me out5,711
- ↳ Horses For Sale and Auction21,153
- ↳ Breeding Ads and Sales6,346
- ↳ Herd Helper42,039
- ↳ Bug Discussion23
- ↳ Repair Log12
- ↳ New User Experience84
- General Discussion1,771
- ↳ Saddle Sisterhood282
- ↳ Games, Contests and GiveAWays348
- ↳ Genetics405
In this Discussion
- JordanK July 2017
- lynn894 July 2017
- NorthernStars July 2017
- OndowaStables July 2017
I'm not sure what these spots are called
-
Ones anyone now what these darker spots are called
Illusively Spelled 2Dp -
They are corn spots. They occur on some roans as part of the image generation (as opposed to having a genetic cause).Breeding high quality Sheldasen horses. Liver chestnut, DP mushroom, and rose gray riding horses. Dun cobs with all the patterns. Watercolor, Wrong Warp and ice on mixed body types.
Stable ID 88 -
Ok thank you I was wondering for a really long time so I decided to ask and thank you again @ondowaStables
-
Corn spots! They are my favourite.
Our CattitudeOwner Of Bellwether Farm
Sport pony breeding farm focused on breeding, selling and showing quality ponies. Specializing in breeding brown, DP, dun, sooty+, & W8. -
In real life they are caused by the horse having some sort of damage done to that part of the skin, from then on it doesn't turn roan. I would show you an example but the year after my stallion develop a couple he just decided to not look roan again anywhere, no body had any clue why.21170