GRAY Coloration  in EQUINES
True Gray, Aging Gray, Slate GRAY
Gray, Graying, Slate Gray

(Some of these may seem irrelevant to you if you are not a Donkey breeder, but plase sift through the parts about donkeys - definitions of the color terms are here).

The ADMS (Donkey Registry) is trying to change the term used to describe the grayish-visual coloration in donkeys.  Earlier, the term Gray-dun was used.  The reason behind this was that most people will look at a donkey and say "it's gray", and secondly that it was believed to be a form of dun (due to the fact that many had darker heads, and 90% had a cross and stripe:  this is a dun factor in horses).  Now as research progresses,
it may be that the coloration is NOT a true dun.  A true dun is a type of dilution color - lightening the body color, while leaving the extremities (head, legs) alone.

Why don't we just call it GRAY?  One main reason - Gray is a horse term.  It is also a specific term that has been in use for hundreds of years.  There are other examples of using GRAY in the animal kingdom (which includes man) which we will cite.

GRAY in horses is an animal which is born dark, and gradually the entire haircoat changes to white. It is more properly termed GRAYING or AGING GRAY, but if you see a white horse (with dark skin), he is really a GRAY.  The term is really chopped and shortened for a process, and gives no thought to the original darker color, which can be interesting when genetics are mapped.  There are some terms for stages of the GRAYING process - Steel gray if they are a dark blue, rose gray if a bay or chestnut is graying out and is mixed red and white hairs, dapple gray if the lighter color dapples appear in the coat.  There are also fleabitten grays (white with darker, usually red, hairs sprinkled throughout) and almost pure-white (the advanced stage) grays.

GRAY is a variable - or changing - color.  A GRAY horse will always have one GRAY parent.  GRAY can be a
homozygous gene (meaning both parents were gray and the offspring has 2 doses of the gray gene, one from each parent) or heterozygous (just one gray gene).  GRAY only requires one dose of the gene to cause the coat to lighten over the horse's life.

DONKEYS that look "gray" to the average individual are stuck in a definition war.  GRAYING is a better term for the horse color (but don't look for it ever to be changed!) , since it implies the changING process.  The "Gray" that donkeys show is more like a pigment - a fixed shade of gray.  Think of your grandma's hair going all white - didn't she say she and grandpa were going gray?  The majority of donkeys that are the familiar blue-ish gray shade will never turn white.  That's because the donkey color is not the same as horse GRAY.  That's why it shouldn't be called GRAY.  Sorry, but the horse people used the term and incorporated it into regular usage first.

GRAY as a PIGMENT - like a paint - is obviously a "Fixed" color.  This means it won't change.  A "Gray" crayon on paper will stay the same shade of GRAY.  But remember that a GRAY crayon used both black and white mixed together to get that shade.  On a donkey's coat, the shade is caused by each hair being the blue-gray color, not a mix of black hairs and white.

There are of course different
SHADES of color - light, medium, dark.  SHADE can affect any color - black, red, purple, slate, blue, etc.  There are Light GRAYS and DARK GRAYS, light BAY or dark bay.  Some shades may be confusing to the eye since they may resemble another color entirely - a LIGHT CHESTNUT Belgian horse may look like a DARK PALOMINO - but the genetic control is different.  A LIGHT SLATE GRAY donkey may look like a MEDIUM GRAY horse, but the SLATE hairs are all SLATE, and the GRAY horse will have mixed white hairs with a darker base.  No matter that they look the same at first glance, they are vastly different.

This is why we propose
SLATE GRAYfor the donkey coloration. The closest coloration in horses is GRULLA (Grullo).  Each hair is individually a blue-gray color.  The term GRULLA means "crane" in Spanish.  The crane is a blue-ish gray color.  SLATE GRAY, slate-blue, blue, crane, mouse, grulla, grullo, blue dun - all are describing the blue-ish gray color that stays blue-ish gray and never turns white.

If a donkey is a visual shade of gray (blue, mouse, crane, grulla) then SLATE is the base color.  Yes, it can be brown-ish, or reddish, or may have some white hairs mixed in.  But each individual hair is mouse-colored, not an overall mix of black and white to produce a gray look.

ROAN is when some white hairs are mixed into the coat.  The terms ROAN and GRAY are used interchangeably by some people and by some registries.  Here is how they really differ:  The Roan horse may have some seasonal variation, but will retain the darker portions of the coat all year.  Most roans have dark heads and legs.  They will stay throughout the horse's life.  A GRAY horse will start to gray-out on the head first, and the whole body will eventually lighten - more and more each year.  ROAN is seasonal, but stable.  GRAY is progressive, and will always get lighter. 

Some ROANING on a donkey is not uncommon.  It is seen frequently in sorrels, in some blacks, and on slates, and is very common on larger donkeys.  There are differences between ROAN in donkeys and in horses, but for the purpose of definition, Roan is SOME white mixed in, GRAY is progressing.

Some breeders have expressed the opinion that "Slate is a death knell to your herd".  IT SHOULDN'T BE.  We would rather see you breed 31" perfectly conformed SLATE GRAY donkeys than 28", parrot-mouthed, popped stifled, short cannoned sorrels or true blacks.  SLATE GRAY is a dominant color.  It can hide the other colors that are recessives. 

Here is a scenario for you.  You breed a SLATE GRAY to a sorrel.  The resulting jennet foal is SLATE GRAY.  But using your knowledge of equine genetics, you know that sorrel is recessive, and the jennet foal is carrying one SLATE GRAY and one SORREL gene.  You breed her to a sorrel, you have a chance of sorrel, rose dun, or slate gray foals.  Her price is $1000.  Do you purchase 5 of these jennets, (being perfectly conformed, with good bites and maturing at your perfect height of 33") or one sorrel jennet priced at $5000, who will be 35" tall and has a slight overbite.  Who carries more wealth in genes?  Just to richen the scene, breed her to a black/brown jack.  Depending on the jack's background, you should get slate, dark brown, or perhaps black or sorrel.  Even though some foals are slate gray, they will carry the recessive for the darker genes.  If you are truly comfortable with the conformation and temperment of your herd and want to try for color breeding, don't overlook "Plain Janes" for their slate gray coloration.

Ideally, the best conformed animal, no matter the color, is the best breeding stock.  You can call the colors anything you want, but for the sake of your future buyers, using an agreed set of terms is best.  That's why we don't use the term chocolate - Hershey's or 3 Muskateers?  Special Dark or Kit-Kat?  Yes, there is overlap in the colors.  Yes, not everyone will always agree on the exact shade.  This is not the important part.  No one, in all horse registries, in donkey registries, in animal registries anywhere will ever completely agree on terms.

A red-all-over Quarter Horse can be a sorrel or a chestnut.  Some say the difference between sorrel and chestnut is the shading on the body.  Some used to say the color of the mane and tail made the difference.  The same red Arabian is a Chestnut.  The term sorrel is not used for Arabians.  Conversely, the same red color in a Suffolk Punch draft horse is always a sorrel. They don't use Chestnut as a color.  Confusing?  You bet.  Will it change?  Probably not. 

There is a coloration in donkeys which looks something like the AGING GRAY in horses, but to stay away from the confusing, it is termed FROSTY in donkeys.  FROSTY may progress a little, FROSTED is grayed or roaned (we are not sure which it is genetically) out more completely.

Horses GRAY out, and become white.  It's a common color.  Donkeys are SLATE GRAY and stay the same rich blue-gray their entire life.  The colorations are different.  The terms are different.  Call them whatever you like, Mxlpxl, crane, mouse, blue, make up your own terms.  They are not AGING GRAY, and should not be confused with the horse coloration.  They should also be evaluated on their own merit and not be condemned for being the ancestral and dominant color of the donkey species. 
Mascot, a Mulassier fillly & her dapple gray dam.  Mascot already shows she will be dapple gray like her dam.
Flambeur, a Mulassier stallion in France. This is the dark "Steel gray" shade - just his face, mane and tail are turning, with silver dapples over a black body. 
A Mulassier mare, in the middle range of graying out, in the dapple stage. 
Dam of Mascot, this mare is starting to be more light in color than dark.  The dark areas are seenn only around the lighter dapples.  She will progress to ......
....A lighter dapple gray, with only a small area of darker contrast (usually on the rump, occasionally on the lower legs. This is Merle, a gray mare mule.
A white-gray Paso Fino mare.
Slate Gray Miniature Donkey yearling.  This is closer in visual color to the Grulla (grullo) color in horses, not the aging gray.  A donkey will stay this color - a "fixed" shade of "Gray" it's whole life (since this donkey does not also have any kind of a frosty roan/frosted gene).  They won't turn white.  So "Gray" in most donkeys doesn't even come close to the accepted horse definition of Gray.
Frosted Spotted White donkey - the closest equivelent in horse colors would be a grayed pinto
El Nino, a Frosted Spotted White miniature donkey.  This is as close as donkeys get to aging gray.  This is the spotted gene linked with the FROSTED gene - which may or not be a true aging gray.  (Some are born nearly white!)
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Registration form for Donkeys & Mules (ADMS)
This is Hermes, a grullo (slate dun) Mulassier stallion.  The base color is black. The body has been lightened to a uniform lighter gray-ish color all over, while the head and legs remain dark.  Although he may darken or lighten seasonally, he will stay a blue-appearing dun his whole life.