Since palomino is a color and not a breed, I think it would depend of the breed (Quarter Horse, Pony, Mini, Arab, Draft, etc.) on how tall the horse will be.
2006-11-17 06:29:48
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answer #1
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answered by Paint Pony 5
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It depends upon the breed and the horse's genetics. A palomino is a color, not a breed. You can have palomino miniatures, palomino Quarter Horses, Palomino paints and Appaloosas, etc.
Palomino is Spanish for :little dove" and is a base body color of three shades lighter or darker than a newly minted gold coin, with white mane and tail and possibly white markings.
2006-11-17 07:06:18
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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A palomino is a color not a specific breed.
PHBA is a color registry for horses standing between fourteen and seventeen hands tall and exhibiting body color, with variations from light to dark, of a U S fourteen karat gold coin. The skin is usually grey, black, brown, or motley without underlying pink skin or spots except on the face or legs. The eyes are usually black, hazel, or brown. The mane and tail must be white with not more than fifteen percent dark, sorrel or chestnut hairs.
There are three basic divisions of Palomino horses. The stock type are western horses predominantly represented by Quarter Horses. The Golden American Saddlebred are typically represented by Saddlebreds and the pleasure type exemplified by Morgan, Arabian, and Tennessee Walking Horses.
Hope that helps
2006-11-17 06:28:32
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answer #3
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answered by yummimum 2
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maximum, if no longer all, of the international record-breakers have been draft horses. The tallest recorded horse grew to become right into a Shire at 21.a million a million/2 hh. the main worry-unfastened tallest breeds are probable the Shire, Clydsdale, Perchon, and Belgian Draft. There are actually not any specific 'using breeds', and a great form of drafts are actual waiting to be ridden, yet i'm assuming you meant those developed for using :) if so, the tallest could be Thoroughbreds and maximum Warmbloods. Warmblood breeds are all on the subject of eachother and virtually all have thoroughbred effect, so there is no longer precisely a 'tallest' using breed. Thoroughbreds regularly attain as much as 17 hh yet can be as small at 15.2 hh. Palominos are not a breed as yet, actual. Many horse breed institutions settle for palomino as a shade and there is likewise a palomino association, yet no breed. wish that helps! :)
2016-10-22 06:29:54
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answer #4
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answered by titman 4
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Palomino is a color, not a breed.
A horse is anything over 14 hands. Under 14 hands and its a pony.
2006-11-17 09:43:22
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answer #5
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answered by nokhada5 4
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yep, depends on the breed of horse it is. almost any breed can have a palomino colored horse...Ive seen palomino drafts (actually called American creams) that were 17-18hh tall.
2006-11-17 08:12:01
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answer #6
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answered by percherongal 3
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Palomino's are a type not a breed so it can be any height depending on the breed
2006-11-17 13:27:37
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Palominos are a registerd color not a breed. But the average breed gets about 15.1.
2006-11-17 06:35:18
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answer #8
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answered by sarah 2
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It depends on what breed it is. Palomino is a COLOR.
2006-11-17 11:24:50
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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usually about 14-15 hands high. depending on the size of the parents. i have a palamino stud and he is 16.5 hands high and my mare just had her foal last night and she is big. so it all depends on the parents, usually the foal will take after the studs side and not the mother. but they should be about 14-15 hands high.
2006-11-17 06:59:48
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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