2 Baby, Male, Small, Buckskin Horses for Sale

showing results 1 - 2 of 2

?1580508951

price: $1,200

19 Month Buckskin Dun Filly Small and Flashy Doc Olena

This colt is very flashy and will make a nice trail or or barrel horse for a woman or kid. She is very gentle and has been loaded and halter broke. I'm offering her before saddle training will star... SEE MORE DETAILS found on Horseclicks

Sturgis, MS, United States


?1577877736

price: $1,500

Dark Buckskin Small Filly

This little filly would make a nice horse for a petite person. She is flashy and smart DOB 08-29-2017 SEE MORE DETAILS found on Horseclicks

Greenville, GA, United States



Sale by Sex

More information on Buckskin


:For other meanings of buckskin, see Buckskin (Disambiguation)

Buckskin is a hair coat color of horses; referring to a color that resembles certain shades of tanned deerskin. Similar colors in some breeds of dogs are also called buckskin. The horse has a tan or gold colored coat with black points (mane, tail, and lower legs). Buckskin occurs as a result of the cream dilution gene acting on a bay horse. Therefore, a buckskin has the Extension, or "black base coat" (E) gene, the agouti (A) gene (see bay for more on the agouti gene), which restricts the black base coat to the points, and one copy of the cream gene, which lightens the red/brown color of the coat to a tan/gold.

Buckskins should not be confused with dun-colored horses, which have the dun dilution gene, not the cream gene. Duns always have primitive markings (shoulder blade stripes, dorsal stripe, zebra stripes on legs, webbing). However, it is possible for a horse to carry both dilution genes; these are called "buckskin duns" or sometimes "dunskins." Also, bay horses without any dun gene may have a faint dorsal stripe, which sometimes is darkened in a buckskin without a dun gene being present. Additional primitive striping beyond just a dorsal stripe is a sure sign of the dun gene.

A buckskin horse can occur in any number of different breeds, though at least one parent must be from a breed that carries the dilution gene, and not all breeds do. Since 1963, the American Buckskin Registry Association has been keeping track of horses with this coat color, and although Buckskin is sometimes classified as a color breed, due to its genetic makeup that depends on having one, not two copies of the dilution allele, it cannot ever be a consistently true-breeding trait.

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