| Pentagram Stables |
| It is a real challenge to breed high rates and good coat in KNNs. That's why I like them. |
| Pentagram Stables |
| It is a real challenge to breed high rates and good coat in KNNs. That's why I like them. |
| Nippy Equine |
| Then theres me over here, throwing COI out the window and breeding siblings together🤣 |
| Ashcroft Park Stud |
| Yeah, I don’t love it either to be honest but… since there is no gameplay downside to inbreeding I happily family wreath it up if that’s the best match |
| Flores Farms |
| Thank you, Ash and Wolf. I like hate to breed my mares to stallions with the same grandpa, but it's either that or they're just stuck with the same crappy ratings. |
| Minerva |
| Em- I think because its one of the smaller breeds and it has to be purebred (plus the pattern requirement) there has to be a lot more inbreeding as theres fewer options |
| Champagne stables |
| Em KKNs struggle on the LBs because they are a weak breed. They tend to get inbred a lot because there isn't a wide variety of strong high rated horses for them |
| Koda Malfoy LLC |
| The red factor, also known as the extension gene, is indeed a gene in horses. It determines whether a horse will have a chestnut base coat color or a black or bay base coat color. The red factor is responsible for producing red pigment (phaeomelanin) and is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. Horses with the dominant red factor allele (E) can produce black pigment, while those with the recessive red factor allele (e) will not produce black pigment and will transmit the recessive red factor allele to their offspring." So you were right about the distribution and stuff, but technically it still is a gene |
| Wolf Dancer |
| Em KNN have been super weak until pretty recently, and had all the same weakness/strengths so they had a very select gene pool, and those studs were the best of their time so people just bred to them |
| Ashcroft Park Stud |
| Most horses seem to be inbred to varying degrees 😅 I don’t breed KNN so can’t comment on those |
| Flores Farms |
| I'm sorry for kinda just jumping in, but I'm so curious. Why are the knabstruppers so inbred on here lately? I swear I see Centurion, For Ęvigt, and Nordic's Wish multiple times on dam and sires sides. |
| Minerva |
| -HEE Click- Nice- my random EWW brood-bred boy has carried on his random EWW brood bred legacy 🤣🤣 Silver AND a filly is a very nice win |
| Ashcroft Park Stud |
| I remember reading ages - like, 10 years - ago that manchado had been observed to be more common in polo ponies bred in warmer climates |
| Ravenwood Farm |
| I thought there is no gene for red, it's just the absence of black? E gives black pigment, and A restricts it to just the points of the horse? |
![]() |
| Pentagram Stables |
| It is a real challenge to breed high rates and good coat in KNNs. That's why I like them. |
| Nippy Equine |
| Then theres me over here, throwing COI out the window and breeding siblings together🤣 |
| Ashcroft Park Stud |
| Yeah, I don’t love it either to be honest but… since there is no gameplay downside to inbreeding I happily family wreath it up if that’s the best match |
| Flores Farms |
| Thank you, Ash and Wolf. I like hate to breed my mares to stallions with the same grandpa, but it's either that or they're just stuck with the same crappy ratings. |
| Minerva |
| Em- I think because its one of the smaller breeds and it has to be purebred (plus the pattern requirement) there has to be a lot more inbreeding as theres fewer options |
| Champagne stables |
| Em KKNs struggle on the LBs because they are a weak breed. They tend to get inbred a lot because there isn't a wide variety of strong high rated horses for them |
| Koda Malfoy LLC |
| The red factor, also known as the extension gene, is indeed a gene in horses. It determines whether a horse will have a chestnut base coat color or a black or bay base coat color. The red factor is responsible for producing red pigment (phaeomelanin) and is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. Horses with the dominant red factor allele (E) can produce black pigment, while those with the recessive red factor allele (e) will not produce black pigment and will transmit the recessive red factor allele to their offspring." So you were right about the distribution and stuff, but technically it still is a gene |
| Wolf Dancer |
| Em KNN have been super weak until pretty recently, and had all the same weakness/strengths so they had a very select gene pool, and those studs were the best of their time so people just bred to them |
| Ashcroft Park Stud |
| Most horses seem to be inbred to varying degrees 😅 I don’t breed KNN so can’t comment on those |
| Flores Farms |
| I'm sorry for kinda just jumping in, but I'm so curious. Why are the knabstruppers so inbred on here lately? I swear I see Centurion, For Ęvigt, and Nordic's Wish multiple times on dam and sires sides. |
| Minerva |
| -HEE Click- Nice- my random EWW brood-bred boy has carried on his random EWW brood bred legacy 🤣🤣 Silver AND a filly is a very nice win |
| Ashcroft Park Stud |
| I remember reading ages - like, 10 years - ago that manchado had been observed to be more common in polo ponies bred in warmer climates |
| Ravenwood Farm |
| I thought there is no gene for red, it's just the absence of black? E gives black pigment, and A restricts it to just the points of the horse? |
|
| 1 .. |
| 1 .. |