A roan with a chestnut base
color and flaxen mane, in the spring, loosing the last of the base coat.
Birtingur from Vestra-Geldingaholti.
Sent by Catharina Hedsåter.
Here is a bay roan in April.
The only sign of the roan color is a patch of white hairs peeking through
in the groin.
C: Lukka.
The same bay roan in the middle
of May.
Hrannar from Gröf.
C: Lukka.
A roan with a chestnut base
color (strawberry roan) in the spring.
The mare shows the head that
is chestnut, and the feet, mane and tail are chestnut, while the wooly
undercoat on the body is white.
Sif frá Skáney.
C: Michael Gunner Jensen.
A roan with a bay dun base color
in the spring.
C: Sofie Kjoelby.
Here are pictures of a mare
which show very well the drastic changes a roan goes through every year.
Here the mare Freyja shows on
the left picture how a black roan (blue roan) looks in the spring and fall,
when the white wooly underhair is the longest hair on the body. The
color of the extremeties, and mane and tail, remain unchanged.
On the right picture Freyja
is in winter hairs, and then it's hard to see that she's not simply a black
horse.
C: Tim Kvick.
Here Freyja is again, in summer
hairs. Now her body has a few whitish hairs intersperced between
the darker hairs. Some roans loose even those hairs and look just
their base colors (in this example, she'd look black). The foal,
Rebbi, looks just ordinary chestnut there, in the early fall it was discovered
that he's red roan (strawberry roan).
C: Tim Kvick.