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DESCRIPTIONS OF SOME UNUSUAL COLORS: GRULLA, CREMELLO, PERLINO
Melanie
Dresser writes [22 Aug 91]: Can someone describe for me a few of the odder
colors that horses come in:
- Grulla: I've seen it, but don't know the
details on the color and how it differs from a roan. (I think it has to do with
the color of each individual hair)
According
to the book _Horse Color_:
Grulla
(pronounced GREW-ya) is a slate-colored horse with black points and a dark or
black head. They almost always have primitive marks (withers stripe, dorsal
stripe, and zebra stripes over the knees and hocks). It is a solid color with
no white mixed in at all, unlike a blue roan, which clearly has white mixed in.
In other words each individual hair is slaty (instead of some hairs being dark
and some white, as in a roan). Overall this color looks like a field mouse,
like grey-brown. It seems to be an ancient color; tarpans were grulla.
"Grulla" is the Spanish word for the sandhill crane, which is a grey
slate-colored bird. "Mouse dun" and "blue dun" are English
terms referring to this same color.
- There are some variations in grulla body
color.
- Slate grulla, described above, is most
common. A blue slate color.
- Lobo grulla or lobo dun is blacker,
especially dorsally.
- Olive grulla is browner, similar to smokey
buckskin.
- Silver grulla is creamy colored with slate
blue points and head.
Genetically, grulla is caused by a dun-dilution of black or seal brown. (Silver
grulla is a dun-dilution combined with a cremello-dilution.)
CREMELLO I think this may be what my first
pony was. He was white in the winter and a pale palomino in the summer. (Dart
was the greatest pony :-))
That's cremello all right. Cremello is a
genetically a chestnut horse that is carrying two c-cr dilution genes. Each
gene reduces the amount of pigment in the hair shafts. One dilution gene in a
genetically chestnut horse gives you palomino (or claybank dun if the mane and
tail are darker), and two gives you cremello, which is basically a very pale
palomino. Cremellos are not pure white but cream or off-white (or even pale
palomino as your pony was in summer) with a white or off-white mane and tail
and blue eyes. They are sometimes called Type-A albino but they're not true
albinos.
PERLINO
A related
color is perlino, which is a double c-cr dilution of a genetically bay or seal
brown horse. (A single dilution gives buckskin, yellowish with black mane and
tail.) Perlinos also have an off-white body, but typically have a rusty mane
and tail, with blue eyes.
See next
question for more on palominos.
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