It’s
a bird! It’s a plane! No, it’s…a white Standardbred colt?! You heard it straight from the horse’s mouth
folks, an unusual occurrence in the horse world happened at Fair Winds Farm in
Cream Ridge, New Jersey about a month ago with the birth of a white
Standardbred colt! Everyone knows the significance of odds when it comes to
horse racing, but the chances of a white Standardbred are so slim that it
hasn’t happened in nearly 15 years! The unique color comes as a result of a
gene mutation; most Standardbreds are usually dark bay, with an occasional grey
or chestnut. So I guess you can say this
little guy is anything but “standard”!
The
unusual colt, which was the product of two bay parents, came as a result of a
spontaneous gene mutation. Although the
foal is nearly entirely white, he does have a small sprinkling of chestnut
color between his ears and the head of his tail. If the little guy has a prosperous racing
career and becomes a commercial sire, you could be seeing more of these genetic
wonders on the track!
Did
you know the Rutgers research herd has its own “white horse”? I mentioned my
new friend a few blog posts back, and now he finally has a name! My boney
buddy’s name is now RU Wish Bone thanks to a young fan of the Rutgers Equine
Science Center! And much like my skeleton friend, a naming contest is being
held for the white Standardbred colt as well.
Suggestions for a name can be posted to his very own Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/WhiteColt (hey, I guess I’m
not the only horse that’s gone viral!) and while you’re there, head over to www.esc.rutgers.edu/fb and “like” my friends at the Equine
Science Center!
That’s
all for now folks…my stomach is grumbling and for some reason I have the
strangest hankering for a powdered
doughnut! Hmm…
Your
hungry friend,
Lord
Nelson
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