@@thefogiscomingthefogiscominggg the ,,white" horse in the picture is acctually either a cremello or has very expressive tobiano. Since a grey wouldn't have a pink nose
READ THE WHOLE COMMENT BEFORE REPLYING OK!? White - Grey Brown - Bay Green - Not ready to be rode Frog - soft part of a hoof this is the mist likes i got… Orange/light orange - chestnut Grey with a hint of orangeish - cremello girl - mare boy - stallion EDIT: ik some horses can be white, and these are eequestrain(sorry my typing) colours ! i’m still learning about horses EDIT 2: STOP . SAYING L STUFF . IK I MIGHT BE WRONG, IK THERE MIGHT BE MROE STIFF, JUST PLEASE NO MORE COMMENTS ABOUT "oh theres (blah blah blah) " " actually a (blah blah) can be a (blah blah) "
For all the non equestrians The first one is called a gray horse when someone says that’s a green horse they mean it’s not a fully trained horse a frog is what is on the hoof and it’s where horses can sense what there touching and it’s not called a brown horse there are many different terms a couple names would be bay or chestnut coat
Actually not to say that horse Is actually classified “ White” because it has albino in its skin, with means it’s a true white… a true grey would be correct for the photo 🤗
The Camarillo White Horse is known for its "PURE WHITE", which includes pink skin under the white hair coat. I have a pure white horse named White iceland
Albinism has never been recorded in horses. The horse in that photo could be dominant white which is a gene like sabino, or it could have the draft-type-sabino gene which hasn't been isolated yet, or a number of other spotting modifiers like overo, tobiano, and leopard. White does not equal albino. In order for a horse to be considered albino it would require a complete lack of melanin production meaning, among other things, its eyes would be red which has never been seen in horses. People may call their horses albino but true albinism does not exist in horses.
Let me explain as an equestrian, The horse that looks white is known as grey because under their fur (so if you shaved it) they have a grey body The ‘green’ horse is not about color, it’s about how well they are trained, so since this horse is green, it needs a bit more training That V in the horses hooves is called the frog because when you pick a horses foot you have to make sure not to pick the V part because it is sensitive to them. The brown looking horse would actually be chestnut, but since the legs, mane, and tail, are black and not chestnut like the body, it is called a bay. Thanks for reading! Edit: hi everyone! This is how I was taught. I’ve been riding for 4 years now, but I know a lot about horses and not just the riding. You guys may have learned something different then I have, but this is what I was taught. So if when you guys reply trying to say I’m wrong or something else, neither of us are wrong. c:
Wow thank you so much my dad owns a farm but my parents are divorced so I don’t see him much and I have a horse there called Tigger not Tiger but yes I have not been an expert at horses for a long time so things really helped also I’m only 10 but I would love to maybe start horseback riding lessons because of how much I love horses they’re so pretty and fast and my dream is to just ride one on the beach in Australia (because that’s where I live)And just go as fast as possible with my hair in the wind and feel free (kinda like lucky and Spirit from the show Spirit on Netflix and no I’m not talking about Spirited Away ok)
I’m a horse girl and it even took me a while to learn all the colours…like at first I was like “wth do they mean? Something wrong with my instructor or-“
The first one. It's Grey ( as most equestrians say ) Second. The horse is green because it's still in training Third. It's called a frog. ( it's a thing that farriers named) and a farrier is someone who takes care of horses And fourth. It's not brown because we class it as a bay
I am so sorry about the first one “this horse is not white” I just grabbed a random image off google and I didn’t really check or pay attention that it had a pink nose. There’s nothing I can do now but I made a new edit fixing my mistake. I hope you can all understand and I am sorry for confusing anyone. But I think that the people that know things about horses will get the concept of what I was trying to say.
I love how you managed to confuse equestrians too 😂 The horse in the licture isn't white, but it's not grey either. It's most likely a very expressive tobiano, wich is super common in cobs or a cremello, because a grey wouldn't have a pink nose.
You are correct. My flea-bitten grey (white w/paint brush dots of black & brown) mare had a blackish muzzle. Her main & tail were white w/black & brown streaks. When she was wet her skin was Purple!
For ppl who don't understand the 'white' horse is actually called a cremello, the frog is a part of the hoof, the green one is a horse not ready to be rode/untrained and the last one is a bay
It doesn’t mean ‘untrained’ . A ‘Green’ horse knows it’s basics, halt, turn, changes of paces up or down, it’s going forward in his education that makes him green. Weather it’s flat work, or jumping. Ie needs more experience with a good rider 🐎
my grandparents and uncle have horses, but i’ve always been scared to even pet them.. idk why i’m so scared of horses, they’re beautiful animals, but it’s only in my worst nightmares i would be riding a horse! maybe it’s the thought of getting bitten, or bucked off
@@zZephyyr_ No, that’s a grey. It has a blaze (invisible on this light of a coat) which causes the pigment on the nose to be pink in all horses (even black ones.) The skin underneath the rest of its fur is black, making this a grey. True white horses are albino, easily seen by the eyes (there will be pink pigment around the eyes and they are normally blue.)
"This is a frog." "No, thats definitely a horse my good sir." (edit: Please stop correcting me^^' i know what it is, im not that dumb. this was just a joke.)
I’m an equestrian! I’ve been doing horse back almost half the year. I started before school ended. It’s funny how non-equestrians don’t know this (no offense) well my friend knows all this and isn’t an equestrian. It’s crazy!
As a non-equestrian with a cousin obsessed with horses I know that a frog is a special part of the hoof and so when your cleaning it you don’t want to scrape that part because it can hurt the horse I also understand the others just don’t know how to explain it
As a fellow equestrian the first horse is actually a true "white" because of the pink/albino skin. If it was a grey it would have grey skin on areas such as on the nose, feet and belly.
@@meganproffitt424 how do you know you're the only one??? Lots of people have argued with me about this before, on multiple videos. So stop and think before you reply.
for the non equestrians, here are the code names for horsey stuff: White-Grey Brown-Bay Green- Hasnt been broke yet orange/lightbrown- chestnut grey with a creme colour- cremello mare-girl stallion-boy broke- train/training/trained
The first horse is a grey horse, because their skin is grey. The second horse is green because they haven’t been trained a lot yet. The third picture is a frog because it’s a part of the hoof and it’s just called that lol. The last horse is a bay horse cause they’re not completely brown cause they have black parts on their body.
No, actually that first horse *is* white because it has pink skin, therefor it is white. Next time for a picture choose a horse with a grey muzzle instead of pink.
First horse is a very light tobiano or cremello, second horse is green because it has little to no formal training, third horse's hoof (like all) have a frog (the part that touches the ground, and the last horse is chestnut/bay. (Can't tell by the picture 😭) I don't even ride horses 🤩
The first horse is Grey. It has dark skin around dark eyes and an obvious dot on its lower lip. It just has a (most likely) bald face that doesn't cover the eyes. A common marking in Clydesdales.
For any non equestrians that are confused, the first horses color is grey, green is a term for untrained horses,the frog is that middle part of the hoof, and that last horse, is color bay. Lol
1. there are no genetically white horses, there are several other colors that look like white though 2. green=inexperienced 3. center of the hoof is called the frog 4. the name for a brown horse with a black mane+tail is "bay"
The horse is actually white 😊 you can see it has pink skin instead of gray skin so it’s an actual white horse. I did one of these trends and got it messed up too. ❤❤❤
For the non equestrians here’s the answer key: The first one is called a grey horse bc their skin underneath their fur is grey. The second one is green bc in the equestrian community we call a not very trained or wild horse that’s in training a green horse. The third one is
@@Cherry-Lycan sorry I had cut off the rest😅 for some reason when I went back to the vid to answer more and edit my comment it said error and kept doing it. Idk what’s happening but that’s why.
I love blue colored animals, they're so pretty. Blue is used to talk about that color in lots of different animals from dogs to cats to horses to poultry!
@@ZK-ib2wp they are my favorite color. Yeah idk why I just mentioned rabbits. I knew about dogs and cats. My roommate had a Russian Blue. I absolutely did not know about poultry though but it makes sense.
I remember when I started riding at a pony camp I asked to ride some crazy mare my trainer said I couldn’t ride that horse cause she was green Me: ✨That horse is black✨
I know the trend or something but the first one it is infact a white horse it has pink skin while gray horses have grey skin (you can tell by the nose)
So the first one isn't classified as "white" it's gray and green means that the horse is still in training and needs more work with a rider, the third one is called a frog, so what the frog does it pumps blood into the horses hoof each time they walk or when standing, and the last one is called a bay (as an equestrian idk why they aren't just called brown tbh😂)
The first horse seemed to have many equestrians confused. Its called smokey cream they put a picture of a horse running in the snow. The snow being true white and the horses coat actually having some color to it.
For those of you who aren’t equestrians or are but don’t understand: It’s not actually a white horse, it has pink unpigmented skin and white hair. A green horse is one that is still in training/being broken. The frog is part of their foot. The horse isn’t brown; it’s a bay.
First horse is grey. Grey horses always have black skin. They are born dark and gradually get grey or white as they age. A white horse has pink skin with white hair. The horse in this pic looks like it has a white blaze down his face and that’s called a marking. White markings are usually on face or on legs but can be elsewhere. Every other coat color has dark skin underneath except white. Green is basically a horse that is new to having a rider on their back. Brown is a blanket term for a variety of coat colors ranging from light to dark and are called different names according to their color. Example is chestnut, sorrel, bay etc. I hope this helps
As a non equestrian I’m gonna try to answer: The first horse is grey not white, it’s because of the color of its skin not the coat The second horse is “green” doesn’t mean that the horse is quite literally green. It just means that the horse is a beginner The third one is a “frog”, again not a literal frog, but when picking a horse’s hooves you don’t touch that part since it’s sensitive. The reason it is sensitive is because they also pump blood there. (Only mess with the frog if your a farrier, at least I think that’s what they are called) And the fourth one, it’s not brown it’s bay (Edits: spelling)
@@the-nighttimes no, no it isn't lol. it isn't called green because of it's color, but rather it's level of training. a green horse is an untrained or barely trained horse. either a young horse just starting to be ridden, or a wild horse that is being broken.
@@the-nighttimes it took me a moment to remember that green was not a color in this joke. 'Green' is used to refer to inexperienced persons in other professions as well.
I understood the last two parts. At ng horse camp, we had someone come and put on hire shoes for a few hoses, and he told us the parts of a hoof and how to put on the shoes for the horse. He did also tell us about the frog. The last one I think isn't brown because it's not what it is correctly called, I think it is supposed to be Bay because Bay horses have brown coats but black mains and tails.
I don't know if it's the same in English but on the fist picture, the horse is actually white and not grey because the skin is pink and not grey, so it's officially a real white horse. At least that's how we categorize them in France :)
I’m from France and that is true, but I live in America now and they do classify that horse as grey here, however it just depends where you live or what barn you go to and what you are taught.
The "white" horse is a Cremello coat. The one that's green IS green. Yes they call that part a frog. And the "brown" horse is actually a bay (or chestnut) coat.
The "white" horse is grey with a blaze. It cannot be a cremello because of its eyes being surrounded by black skin, and them being brown (double cream dilutes cannot have brown eyes). Cremello/Perlino/Smoky Cream all also have a creamy coat color hence why their called cream dilutes. This horse's fur is plain white which is seen in greys of any base color
The " white " horse is not a cremello because 1 that horse on the screen is called a gray. 2 cremello's can not have black skin surrounding their eye. 3 cremello's have a creamier color skin that that
This is for the non equestrians: The “white” horse is grey because if you shaved it the body would be grey The horse is green not because of the color but it is not trained correctly so you would say “this horse is green” The v is called a frog because it is sensitive to them so if your mucking out their hooves you would have to use the brush for the frog never use the pick for it The last horse is not brown, the body is chestnut but the mane tale and legs are black so it is called a bay
@@blcksh33p84 1- that is a grey horse, white horses are called grays. 2- Green horses are horses that are untrained. 3- That triangle in the hooves are called frogs. 4- that horse is a sorrel color. Other colors that would work are bay/chestnut. We never call horses brown.
For people who don't understand a white horse is called a cremllo, the Frog is apat of the hoof green is another word for un trained and the Last One is a bay
❤ I love u have a great day pin me please!
Thanks 😊
I understand everything
Same
Wow😍
What if I dont
Me as a non equestrian: a-are they color blind or like..
Haha 😂 the equestrian world can be confusing
We are not lol but we use different words for different colours and stuff 😀💅
White = Grey
Green horse = Unready to be ridden
Brown horse = Bay
Frog = Part of the hoof
@@thefogiscomingthefogiscominggg the ,,white" horse in the picture is acctually either a cremello or has very expressive tobiano. Since a grey wouldn't have a pink nose
@@the_ethical_horse_girl I was coming to the comments looking for this comment i really was like he is not a grey.
Non equestrians: "Gawd you guys are colourblind"
Equestrians: "Nah, we just don't know how to name things"
FACTS- Either too detailed- OR LACKING.
right?! My poor students.
"Why is it called a frog? A curry brush? A chestnut? A crow hop? etc."
I don't know.
Nah they blind. Or did a kid name them?!
Color*
@@XenaYT__ "Colour" is how my country spells it x
The “are you a pretty horsie?” Caught me off guard-
yea i thought i was the only one aswell!
HELP I WAS WEARING HEADPHONES
READ THE WHOLE COMMENT BEFORE REPLYING OK!?
White - Grey
Brown - Bay
Green - Not ready to be rode
Frog - soft part of a hoof
this is the mist likes i got…
Orange/light orange - chestnut
Grey with a hint of orangeish - cremello
girl - mare
boy - stallion
EDIT: ik some horses can be white, and these are eequestrain(sorry my typing) colours ! i’m still learning about horses
EDIT 2: STOP . SAYING L STUFF . IK I MIGHT BE WRONG, IK THERE MIGHT BE MROE STIFF, JUST PLEASE NO MORE COMMENTS ABOUT "oh theres (blah blah blah) " " actually a (blah blah) can be a (blah blah) "
Umm chestnut
No it's not the bottom of a hoof it's the soft part of a hoof :)
Oop i thought the white looking horse was cremello
Thank you 😅
Brown is not always bay it can be chestnut
For all the non equestrians
The first one is called a gray horse when someone says that’s a green horse they mean it’s not a fully trained horse a frog is what is on the hoof and it’s where horses can sense what there touching and it’s not called a brown horse there are many different terms a couple names would be bay or chestnut coat
But if it has a pink nose it’s called a white horse that one has a pink nose
@@dutchesbostonmate exactly the person who wrote this wasn’t paying attention
@@RM_barrel_racing mhm you are correct
@@dutchesbostonmate nOPe
Ok so it's like Morse code
Basically as hard to understand
Secret language
Actually not to say that horse Is actually classified “ White” because it has albino in its skin, with means it’s a true white… a true grey would be correct for the photo 🤗
The Camarillo White Horse is known for its "PURE WHITE", which includes pink skin under the white hair coat. I have a pure white horse named White iceland
@@Dansespire Nice name! But real white horses are still very rare
Albinism has never been recorded in horses. The horse in that photo could be dominant white which is a gene like sabino, or it could have the draft-type-sabino gene which hasn't been isolated yet, or a number of other spotting modifiers like overo, tobiano, and leopard. White does not equal albino. In order for a horse to be considered albino it would require a complete lack of melanin production meaning, among other things, its eyes would be red which has never been seen in horses. People may call their horses albino but true albinism does not exist in horses.
it actually white, not a grey horse
It's a dominant white not an albino, the eyes are blue not red
Alternative title: Let's confuse everyone
I showed this to my non-equestrian friend and she was very confused 🤣
Let me explain as an equestrian,
The horse that looks white is known as grey because under their fur (so if you shaved it) they have a grey body
The ‘green’ horse is not about color, it’s about how well they are trained, so since this horse is green, it needs a bit more training
That V in the horses hooves is called the frog because when you pick a horses foot you have to make sure not to pick the V part because it is sensitive to them.
The brown looking horse would actually be chestnut, but since the legs, mane, and tail, are black and not chestnut like the body, it is called a bay.
Thanks for reading!
Edit: hi everyone! This is how I was taught. I’ve been riding for 4 years now, but I know a lot about horses and not just the riding. You guys may have learned something different then I have, but this is what I was taught. So if when you guys reply trying to say I’m wrong or something else, neither of us are wrong. c:
The v part is called frog because it resembles the shape of a frog, not because of how sensitive it is.
Thank you sm
Thanks for that explanation
Wow thank you so much my dad owns a farm but my parents are divorced so I don’t see him much and I have a horse there called Tigger not Tiger but yes I have not been an expert at horses for a long time so things really helped also I’m only 10 but I would love to maybe start horseback riding lessons because of how much I love horses they’re so pretty and fast and my dream is to just ride one on the beach in Australia (because that’s where I live)And just go as fast as possible with my hair in the wind and feel free (kinda like lucky and Spirit from the show Spirit on Netflix and no I’m not talking about Spirited Away ok)
This helped alot ty!
I can’t relate to this more😂 my non horsey friends: oh look at that white horse
Me: ummm no thats not a white horse
Hahaha ikr
i know what all these mean but the white horse one can you please help
The horse is not white it’s grey
Edit:I have never more than 5 likes, thanks so much❤️
IT ITS WHITE ITS CREMELLO
@@PrinzessKennY grey horses have grey skin. that is a white horse, white horses have pink skin.
lol this is so true i have non equestrian friends and i love to confuse them with stuff like this
I’m a horse girl and it even took me a while to learn all the colours…like at first I was like “wth do they mean? Something wrong with my instructor or-“
As a non-equestrian, I can confirm this has bamboozled me on another level
The first one. It's Grey ( as most equestrians say )
Second. The horse is green because it's still in training
Third. It's called a frog. ( it's a thing that farriers named) and a farrier is someone who takes care of horses
And fourth. It's not brown because we class it as a bay
@@Simply_Rebeccaa Can't judge. The American school and Math system is worse. :)
@@xXSunStrikeXx you’re 100% right 😂
@@Simply_Rebeccaaur right as I am an equestrian
Lucky 🍀 i want a horse
I am so sorry about the first one “this horse is not white” I just grabbed a random image off google and I didn’t really check or pay attention that it had a pink nose. There’s nothing I can do now but I made a new edit fixing my mistake. I hope you can all understand and I am sorry for confusing anyone. But I think that the people that know things about horses will get the concept of what I was trying to say.
Wont stay white for long 😍
To be fair I have a flea bitten grey that has a pink nose 🤷🏼♀️
The horse actually isn't white. It is a very bright blonde. I don't even ride horses and know this
This is a grey. It only has a large marking
Sounds like you confused yourself lol
All the equestrians with their evil grins as they survey the non equestrians' looks of utter confusion 😂
“Are you a pretty horsey?”
Got me dying fr bro😂😂😂
I thought was the only one who heard that😂😂😂
@@Ilovecatsinfinitylol😂😂 I’m in the car
SCARED THE LIFE OUTA ME THO
I love how you managed to confuse equestrians too 😂 The horse in the licture isn't white, but it's not grey either. It's most likely a very expressive tobiano, wich is super common in cobs or a cremello, because a grey wouldn't have a pink nose.
Or maybe it's a flea bitten grey.
@@joshaw7356 definatelly not, the colors ain't right
"wHiTe"
You are correct. My flea-bitten grey (white w/paint brush dots of black & brown) mare had a blackish muzzle. Her main & tail were white w/black & brown streaks.
When she was wet her skin was Purple!
Cobs can be white. That horse don't look cremello of tobiano.
Equestrians: This horse is not brown
Non-equestrians: Is it orange?
Equestrians: This horse is no white
Non-equestrians: I know this it is a cloud!
Brown is just dark orange tho
I think it's a bay, but someone will correct me if I'm wrong lol
@@Faesharlyn nope you're right
@@Faesharlyn no you are right
For ppl who don't understand the 'white' horse is actually called a cremello, the frog is a part of the hoof, the green one is a horse not ready to be rode/untrained and the last one is a bay
I love all your videos and I like your horse
As a horse rider, the first horse has pink skin (check his/her nose) making it actually a white horse, a grey horse has blue/ grey skin.
Yes !!!!
@@Madison.54 no wrong
There's probably other genes going on for that pink nose to occur, but it's not white.
I was gonna say that thanks
I'm in danger.
I knew the green horse meant lvl 1, I don't ride but I'm slowly learning cuz this stuff is just very interesting ahaha
It doesn’t mean ‘untrained’ . A ‘Green’ horse knows it’s basics, halt, turn, changes of paces up or down, it’s going forward in his education that makes him green. Weather it’s flat work, or jumping. Ie needs more experience with a good rider 🐎
OH _green_ horse! Okay I thought they were talking about the color lol.
my grandparents and uncle have horses, but i’ve always been scared to even pet them.. idk why i’m so scared of horses, they’re beautiful animals, but it’s only in my worst nightmares i would be riding a horse! maybe it’s the thought of getting bitten, or bucked off
I HAVE BEEN RIDEING FOR AS LONG AS I CAN REMEMBER AND THIS MAKES ME LAUGH WHEN PPL GET SOOO CONFUSED 😂
As a non-equestrian who was obsessed with horses as a child, only the first one stumped me. 😅
It is actually called a gray horse
That's because the horse IS white. They didn't pick a correct image. The skin was pink. So, it's a white horse.
its just horses arent fully white
@@zZephyyr_ No, that’s a grey. It has a blaze (invisible on this light of a coat) which causes the pigment on the nose to be pink in all horses (even black ones.) The skin underneath the rest of its fur is black, making this a grey. True white horses are albino, easily seen by the eyes (there will be pink pigment around the eyes and they are normally blue.)
Its an albino hourse (you can tell because the noes is pink if the nose was gray it would be white)
As a non-equestrian, I can confirmed that I am confused
Me two lol🤣
Same! 🥲🥲😩😩😩
First one is grey in horsey language
@@Sophieroche82 thanks
Same
As a non equestrian I get all of these apart from the frog one 😅. I have two friends who are equestrians so I’ve been taught hehe.
Me as a non-equestrian: “ I don’t think I’m supposed to understand this “
Me being a non-equestrian: Yup, mission accomplished- I’m so confused and questioning my existence :D
Same, *I need explaining* 😭😭
“Are you pretty horsie” 😂😂😂😂
These make me laugh I showed my non equestrian friend and she was so confused 😂
I love the way you styled your horses hair ❤
"This is a frog." "No, thats definitely a horse my good sir."
(edit: Please stop correcting me^^' i know what it is, im not that dumb. this was just a joke.)
Lol no that means the bottom of their foot
@@ramiedaponte3909 ik, haha, like the human equivalent of a sole, i was just kiddings^^
@@ramiedaponte3909 woosh
That is part of the hoof. It's name is the frog 🐸
That part of the hove is called a frog
I am an equestrian and i just realised why none of my friends ever know what im taking about
Throw "Fetlocks' at them , they never like to admit that they have no idea what that is.
lol I loved this so much it makes so much sense in an amusing way
I’m an equestrian! I’ve been doing horse back almost half the year. I started before school ended. It’s funny how non-equestrians don’t know this (no offense) well my friend knows all this and isn’t an equestrian. It’s crazy!
All the non-equestrians are probably thinking we fell off one to many times 😂
Lmao 🤣
What’s a equestrian
Ikr 😂
@@Fairy_Aqxa people who love horses and ride them and its kind of hard to explain
@@ava_m_666 ooop so I’m a ex equestrian still love horses though
‘ this isn’t a pony.. ‘ 🤭😂
‘ it’s a horse- ‘ 🤗😌
but there wasemt one pony they werre all horses
@@Rei_Truthcraft i think it's about mlp
@@teimao ahh sorry i didnt understand the comment i was a bit sad that day so i didnt know what i was saying lol xx
@@teimao What's mlp?
As a non-equestrian with a cousin obsessed with horses I know that a frog is a special part of the hoof and so when your cleaning it you don’t want to scrape that part because it can hurt the horse I also understand the others just don’t know how to explain it
“White horse” called gray, “green horse” means it’s not fully trained, and “brown horse” is a bay. My 4 years old riding has come to use! 😍✋
So relatable 😂I have non-horsy friends who if I show them a pic of a bay they are like “oh what I pretty brown horse” 😅
My non-horsy friend says that horse is not green so we end up getting in I augment
My mom's friend's sister owns a horse and i asked her what breed her sister's horse was and she legit said "Idk...brown?" like wtf
As a fellow equestrian the first horse is actually a true "white" because of the pink/albino skin. If it was a grey it would have grey skin on areas such as on the nose, feet and belly.
Unless it has white markings in those places.
It’s gray. No pink around the eyes
Yes! I agree! People keep arguing with me because I said it actually is a true white.... because it is!
It's not. And I'm the only one saying anything to you about it, so "person" instead of people. @@shyshorsemodels
@@meganproffitt424 how do you know you're the only one??? Lots of people have argued with me about this before, on multiple videos. So stop and think before you reply.
for the non equestrians, here are the code names for horsey stuff:
White-Grey
Brown-Bay
Green- Hasnt been broke yet
orange/lightbrown- chestnut
grey with a creme colour- cremello
mare-girl
stallion-boy
broke- train/training/trained
The first horse is a grey horse, because their skin is grey. The second horse is green because they haven’t been trained a lot yet. The third picture is a frog because it’s a part of the hoof and it’s just called that lol. The last horse is a bay horse cause they’re not completely brown cause they have black parts on their body.
No, actually that first horse *is* white because it has pink skin, therefor it is white. Next time for a picture choose a horse with a grey muzzle instead of pink.
I was thinking the same thing
@@PrinzessKennY I’m partially color blind so I can’t help you there. All I can see good is the muzzle, so that’s the information I’m going off of.
First horse is a very light tobiano or cremello, second horse is green because it has little to no formal training, third horse's hoof (like all) have a frog (the part that touches the ground, and the last horse is chestnut/bay. (Can't tell by the picture 😭)
I don't even ride horses 🤩
The first ones white lol
The lash one is not chest but it's bae
Brooklyn- Shhh! Quiet, we're not supposed to know these things. It's like a secret code that they use to make us non-horse people seem stupid. 😆
@piztah haha🫤
The first horse is Grey. It has dark skin around dark eyes and an obvious dot on its lower lip. It just has a (most likely) bald face that doesn't cover the eyes. A common marking in Clydesdales.
I love that! I'm equestrian, so I already knew thats stuff, but I love!
For any non equestrians that are confused, the first horses color is grey, green is a term for untrained horses,the frog is that middle part of the hoof, and that last horse, is color bay. Lol
Me thinking ill understand before watching the video
Me during the video:👁👄👁
1. there are no genetically white horses, there are several other colors that look like white though 2. green=inexperienced 3. center of the hoof is called the frog 4. the name for a brown horse with a black mane+tail is "bay"
Horses are so beautiful I could never imagine a world without them they are my souls purpose in life I love horses now and forever ❤
I hate horses- 😅😅😅
@@HeartsforReiReisame bro 😂
Horses are not my favourite but there quite nice I guess
@@itsukishark I just find them really irritating like c’mon-🤨🤨🤨
Same i met a horse on goliday then had to keave we were close
😂yeah, I can't tell you how many times I had to explain horse terms to my non- horsey friends!Lol!
My horse got spooked at the scariest thing ever ✨nothingness✨
So relatable! I told my friends that my horse wasn’t brown and they got so confused
😮❤Doesn't matter it's a horse. So I got two right. Lol
I am an equestrian but i just realised how bad we are at naming things lmao
I mean, we call the hairs on the horse's legs "feathers" rofl
I thought the "white horse" was a palomino, the other ones were confusing 💀
@@hellod7961 yh we are really bad at namim stuff
fr lmao
@@hellod7961 i thought the white horse was a cremello I feel dumb
The horse is actually white 😊 you can see it has pink skin instead of gray skin so it’s an actual white horse. I did one of these trends and got it messed up too. ❤❤❤
*me being proud showing this to my non-equestrian friends and being the only one there to understand it*
For the non equestrians here’s the answer key:
The first one is called a grey horse bc their skin underneath their fur is grey.
The second one is green bc in the equestrian community we call a not very trained or wild horse that’s in training a green horse.
The third one is
I don't even think green is exclusive to equestrians lol
It's used for almost any skill/sport to refer to someone as green when they're new/untrained.
Ain't no way you just say the first two and then cut off the rest, please I need to know more!
@@MizuSky Can confirm in my sport team. Playing basketball, I referred to as a green player, I was confused until my coach told me what it meant lol.
@@Cherry-Lycan sorry I had cut off the rest😅 for some reason when I went back to the vid to answer more and edit my comment it said error and kept doing it. Idk what’s happening but that’s why.
@@SequoiaEditz Lmao it's alright, it happens. Hope you enjoyed the short after three months-.
I always love the weird color names in animals. Like "blue" for light grey colored rabbits
I love blue colored animals, they're so pretty. Blue is used to talk about that color in lots of different animals from dogs to cats to horses to poultry!
@@ZK-ib2wp they are my favorite color. Yeah idk why I just mentioned rabbits. I knew about dogs and cats. My roommate had a Russian Blue. I absolutely did not know about poultry though but it makes sense.
It's not confusing. These are some beauties...
As someone who isnt an equestrian but knows how to ride horses and would love to ride them more often, i knew all of these 😃
I remember when I started riding at a pony camp I asked to ride some crazy mare my trainer said I couldn’t ride that horse cause she was green
Me:
✨That horse is black✨
i call them green beans sometimes, it really confuses people
this moment when you grew up with horses but realize u didnt know half of it.
LOL SO TRUE
The white horse not being white is wrong.
@@emzraven666 thank u, i know the person who made this video already said she wasnt looking at its nose enough when she choosed the picture. 😅
I know the trend or something but the first one it is infact a white horse it has pink skin while gray horses have grey skin (you can tell by the nose)
Good job 👍 now I have been confused my brain cells are fried and now I have a day of googling to do
Non-equestrians: You guys CLEARLY can’t see collars or animals correctly.
Equestrians: Nah, it’s just because we can’t name things.
nah it's just cause we snobbish and brain blind.
@@Lita-bj5ir What did they do to you...
@@Lita-bj5irTF
So the first one isn't classified as "white" it's gray and green means that the horse is still in training and needs more work with a rider, the third one is called a frog, so what the frog does it pumps blood into the horses hoof each time they walk or when standing, and the last one is called a bay (as an equestrian idk why they aren't just called brown tbh😂)
@@Lita-bj5irrude.
Me as a equestrian I actually understand this so proud of myself for some reason 😂
Now I understand too so now we both are happy
The first horse seemed to have many equestrians confused. Its called smokey cream they put a picture of a horse running in the snow. The snow being true white and the horses coat actually having some color to it.
lmao!!! I can't stop chuckling.
"Oh, I know! That is an orange horse"
For those of you who aren’t equestrians or are but don’t understand: It’s not actually a white horse, it has pink unpigmented skin and white hair. A green horse is one that is still in training/being broken. The frog is part of their foot. The horse isn’t brown; it’s a bay.
Eure Pferde sind echt süß❤
When I first learned the frog 😂😂I thought my trainer was kidding
First horse is grey. Grey horses always have black skin. They are born dark and gradually get grey or white as they age. A white horse has pink skin with white hair. The horse in this pic looks like it has a white blaze down his face and that’s called a marking. White markings are usually on face or on legs but can be elsewhere. Every other coat color has dark skin underneath except white. Green is basically a horse that is new to having a rider on their back. Brown is a blanket term for a variety of coat colors ranging from light to dark and are called different names according to their color. Example is chestnut, sorrel, bay etc. I hope this helps
I'm pretty sure 1st is albino
@@RoshneeMusic no such thing as an albino horse
@EquusKeepusBrokus9791 Well, a horse can be albino
@@EquusKeepusBrokus9791 there quite literally is
my friend has an albino horse
LMAO I showed this to my equestrian therapy/horseback riding coach 🤣🤣 She loved the one image saying: “this is a frog”
Hi i love your vides pls do more every week
I’m not an equestrian but I understand this so much like the “white” horse is not white it’s cream and same with the “brown” it’s apricot lol 😅
As a non equestrian I’m gonna try to answer:
The first horse is grey not white, it’s because of the color of its skin not the coat
The second horse is “green” doesn’t mean that the horse is quite literally green. It just means that the horse is a beginner
The third one is a “frog”, again not a literal frog, but when picking a horse’s hooves you don’t touch that part since it’s sensitive. The reason it is sensitive is because they also pump blood there. (Only mess with the frog if your a farrier, at least I think that’s what they are called)
And the fourth one, it’s not brown it’s bay
(Edits: spelling)
I sent it to my friend and she goes “OHHH green is because it’s eyes are green and it’s skin is green” I was like..
omg lol
THAT'S WHAT THIS IS?!
@@the-nighttimes no, no it isn't lol. it isn't called green because of it's color, but rather it's level of training. a green horse is an untrained or barely trained horse. either a young horse just starting to be ridden, or a wild horse that is being broken.
@@winchesters4life34 oh, that makes more sense now, thanks.
@@the-nighttimes it took me a moment to remember that green was not a color in this joke. 'Green' is used to refer to inexperienced persons in other professions as well.
I understood the last two parts. At ng horse camp, we had someone come and put on hire shoes for a few hoses, and he told us the parts of a hoof and how to put on the shoes for the horse. He did also tell us about the frog. The last one I think isn't brown because it's not what it is correctly called, I think it is supposed to be Bay because Bay horses have brown coats but black mains and tails.
As a chicken keeper, the last horse is almost definitely classified as "red".
Me as a non equestrian: I have GOT to get into the stables, and fast
"What's that?" "OH, it's a frog my good sir" "uh no. That's a horse hoof." "No its a frog" "ARE YOU BLIND ITS A HORSE HOOF!?"
Just so you know,(not being mean) the inside of that little triangle is actually called a frog, but it’s not the animal frog. 👍🏻
The part is the frog 😂
Did you say that horse stepped on a frog? Poor thing. Must've been horsing around and not looking where it stepped 😅
White-grey
Brown-bay
Green-not ready to ride
Frog soft part of hoof do not pick it!!❤❤
I had head phones on all i heard was " are u pretty horsie yes u are!"
The fact that i’m not an equestrian YET, i understand all of this😂
same
Help please 😭
I'm horse girl, I'm not Equestrian, I don't like when people call me like that. I ride horses since I 5 years old
As a equestrian i find it funny how the reactions where with my non equestrian friend🤣
As a non-equestrian but a cellist, i can say that a frog does not look like that, but a rectangular shape.
My brain: “I’m so confused right now”
Me: “WTH-“
I’m not a equestrian but I study horses sm. Love the grey and bay!
I don't know if it's the same in English but on the fist picture, the horse is actually white and not grey because the skin is pink and not grey, so it's officially a real white horse. At least that's how we categorize them in France :)
I’m from France and that is true, but I live in America now and they do classify that horse as grey here, however it just depends where you live or what barn you go to and what you are taught.
@@stickeryblub3626 I see, thanks
😂😂 my friends would be so cunfuzzled
Good luck I am gonna grow up to love horses, and I even have a plan to set out and get one
The "white" horse is a Cremello coat.
The one that's green IS green.
Yes they call that part a frog.
And the "brown" horse is actually a bay (or chestnut) coat.
The "white" horse is grey with a blaze. It cannot be a cremello because of its eyes being surrounded by black skin, and them being brown (double cream dilutes cannot have brown eyes). Cremello/Perlino/Smoky Cream all also have a creamy coat color hence why their called cream dilutes. This horse's fur is plain white which is seen in greys of any base color
The " white " horse is not a cremello because 1 that horse on the screen is called a gray. 2 cremello's can not have black skin surrounding their eye. 3 cremello's have a creamier color skin that that
this would be hard to explain to my friends
This is for the non equestrians:
The “white” horse is grey because if you shaved it the body would be grey
The horse is green not because of the color but it is not trained correctly so you would say “this horse is green”
The v is called a frog because it is sensitive to them so if your mucking out their hooves you would have to use the brush for the frog never use the pick for it
The last horse is not brown, the body is chestnut but the mane tale and legs are black so it is called a bay
I love confusing my non-equestrian friends with terms like this! Always soooo much fun!
When I was 15, an 8 yr old green horse taught me what it meant to be firm but kind, patient and confident. He taught me so much! ❤️❤️❤️
Green Horse?! You guys colorblind or something?
*me as a non-equestrian who loves horses and understands everything*
explain please. For I am non equestrian and I have no clue
Your not the only one😅
I love horses and I’m a big horse person but I still understand basically all of this.
White is gray because they have gray skin
@@blcksh33p84
1- that is a grey horse, white horses are called grays.
2- Green horses are horses that are untrained.
3- That triangle in the hooves are called frogs.
4- that horse is a sorrel color. Other colors that would work are bay/chestnut. We never call horses brown.
If you’re a non-equestrian that understand everything than you're an equestrian
For people who don't understand a white horse is called a cremllo, the Frog is apat of the hoof green is another word for un trained and the Last One is a bay