For roleplaying regular/real-world species with real-world limitations, e.g. cats, dogs, wolves, lions, bears.
by Spiritstar3 » Sun Jun 16, 2024 10:12 am
Palominos have pink hooves, but other than that everything looks good. Accepted, Melody.
(gray is usually on like bay horses if they have white leg markings, or it would be on horses with silver points, such as silver bay, silver buckskin, silver dapple probably, things like that)
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Spiritstar3
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by Seeley » Sun Jun 16, 2024 10:21 am
(I went ahead and made him older)
MODS! Please stop messaging me! Leave me alone!
NO ONE MESSAGE ME; idc who it is( unless you’re a friend) but other than that, you’ll either be blocked or the message will be immediately deleted( I won’t read it)
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Seeley
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by Spiritstar3 » Sun Jun 16, 2024 10:26 am
Kay kay
I think he's fine at 18 because I doubt anyone will have their horses trying to challenge him. But I guess in real life once a stallion passes a certain age a younger stallion can beat them. I think the younger stallion would also have to be passed a certain age too though.
You can also put Macchiato as his son in the other section if you want to, but you don't have to. Since I'm going to edit Matcha and Macchiato to put Hinto as family.
Melody:
Is a Nokota a smaller breed?
I'm trying to figure out who could take my pony mare.
She's not tiny but she isn't very big either.
Also, Winter is going to crush on Baxter.
Last edited by
Spiritstar3 on Sun Jun 16, 2024 11:03 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Spiritstar3
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by SaphiraBrightscales » Sun Jun 16, 2024 10:40 am
The traditional Nokota, which are descendants from the herds that were present in the national park when it was created, tend to have more refinement and are closer in appearance to Colonial Spanish horses. They are smaller as well, coming to a height of 14-14.3 hands high.
The Ranch horses, which come from the additional breeds the national park added to its herds from 1940-1980, tend to be a bit larger and resembled Quarter Horses. Some stallions in this subtype may reach 17 hands high, with 15 hands or higher very common.
just depends on if their Nokota mix favors the more traditional or the larger variety. I also edited mine to make her on the traditional side of the Nokota breed
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SaphiraBrightscales
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by Spiritstar3 » Sun Jun 16, 2024 10:47 am
SaphiraBrightscales wrote:The traditional Nakota, which are descendants from the herds that were present in the national park when it was created, tend to have more refinement and are closer in appearance to Colonial Spanish horses. They are smaller as well, coming to a height of 14-14.3 hands high.
The Ranch horses, which come from the additional breeds the national park added to its herds from 1940-1980, tend to be a bit larger and resembled Quarter Horses. Some stallions in this subtype may reach 17 hands high, with 15 hands or higher very common.
just depends on if their Nakota mix favors the more traditional or the larger variety. I also edited mine to make her on the traditional side of the Nakota breed
Kay kay
I think a Quarter pony is like 14 or 13 hands
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