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N ancy Harris had no doubt she had a horse of a
in the Morgan and searching for individuals of colors previously
unknown in our breed is a big part of that endeavor. For many
years I suspected that the rare silver gene existed in Morgans. One
of the horses I most wondered about was a mare named Orcland
Youlenda. She looked exactly like a classic
black silver in her black and white photos
in old issues of The Morgan Horse . At the 2000 AMHA Convention
held in Atlanta, Nancy Caisse of Townshend Farm presented a slide
show of historical Morgans from the New England area. In her
presentation was a color slide of Youlenda’s dam, Paleface (Squire
Burger, chestnut x Zona Skinner, registered as chestnut but now
known to have actually been a silver dapple). The mare was clearly
a bay silver! I was very excited to see this picture as it conirmed my
belief that silver had indeed been present at one time in the breed.
The question was, did it still exist—or had the gene died out?
different color.
But when the oddly colored illy toddled to her feet
that day in April of 1983, little did Nancy know that
she would become a cornerstone mare in
the salvation of a color which was hanging
by a thread in the Morgan breed. Nancy was not sure what color
her new illy was, though she had very strong suspicions. But time
has an interesting way of revealing the facts, and nowhere is that
more apparent than in our ever-evolving knowledge of equine
color genetics.
By Laura Behning
So, What Color iS it?
One of my favorite pastimes is researching and writing about
color in Morgans. Ferreting out the sources for each color present
Above: Foxton Felicia and Chip Cooper competing in the 1992 Top of the World Competitive Trail Ride in Foxton, CO;
Insets: Foxton Felicia with her irst foal, the dark bay or brown based silver illy Foxton Fawn (by Society Statusmaster). Fawn is registered
as black, “with silver mane and tail, silver dapple” in the markings section, as her registration was changed in 2002, which was before silver
was offered as a registration option; Foxton Felicia in the spring of her yearling year. Yearling black silvers are often very dappled, with a pale
mane and tail. The mane and tail may darken over time, as Felicia’s eventually did.
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Foxton FaWn & Foxton Smokey DaWn
Left to right: The dark bay or brown based silver mare Foxton Fawn (Society Statusmaster x Foxton Felicia) in retirement in Georgia;
Foxton Smokey Dawn (Topside Midnight x Foxton Felicia), 1990 black silver mare (registered as a chestnut). As they age, many silvers lose
the bright white mane and tail they had as youngsters. It is easy to see how they can be confused with the chestnut color.
The answer came in February 2002 when John and Bobbie
Zeulner’s stallion, Zeulners’Sunka Wakan (S Bar B Blksaddle
Chester x Zeulners’Marvelous Melody), became the irst conirmed
silver Morgan via DNA color testing. The world inally knew that
for sure, silver existed in Morgans! Silver Morgans are still very
rare—there are only about ifty alive at present—but their numbers
are growing due to the attraction of this undeniably beautiful color
and the dedicated breeders who wish to preserve it.
Silver, sometimes called silver dapple, is a dilution gene (like
cream and dun) that only affects black pigment. It turns a black
horse’s body to a chocolate color, and the mane and tail to a silvery
gray. On a bay horse only the leg points are diluted to chocolate,
again with a silver mane and tail. Silver has no effect on chestnut,
as there is no black hair to dilute, but chestnuts can carry—and
pass on—the gene if they inherited it from at least one parent.
Often silvers are mistaken for laxen chestnut (and vice versa),
but genetically, they are two entirely different colors. In North
American light horse breeds, silver is the signature color of the
Rocky Mountain Horse, where it is called ‘chocolate.’ It is also a
common color in the Shetland and Miniature Horse.
I had seen pictures of Sunka’s paternal grand-dam, Foxton
Fawn (Society Statusmaster x Foxton Felicia), and knew she must
be a silver and the source of Sunka’s unusual coloring. And so my
search for more information—and ultimately, a silver Morgan
of my own—led me to Foxton Morgans, owned by Tom and
Barbara Butterield, their daughter Nancy Harris and Nancy’s
husband Thom.
Foxton Morgans, located in Foxton, Colorado, is comprised
of some 4,000 acres in the Rocky Mountains, much of it now
preserved in conservation easements. The terrain is rugged, an
environment that gifts the Foxton horses with strong feet and legs
and a hardy constitution. Originally the ranch had been a livery
stable for many different breeds of horses. The family became
involved with breeding Morgans in 1976 with the purchase of
SH Crescent (H-Ken x Flashy Bess), a chestnut mare who was,
in Nancy’s words, “a sensitive, high-stepping mare, so we sought
out steady temperaments and dispositions to cross with her.” That
search for stallions ultimately led the family to Pegasus Persuader
(Topside Jolly Roger x Dainty Dot), owned by Jack and Ginny
Muse of Pegasus Morgans in nearby Parker, CO.
Persuader was registered as a chestnut, but is now known to
have actually been a bay or brown based silver. His sire, Topside
Jolly Roger (Kings-Haven Senator x Yampa Sue), was a chestnut
who carried the silver gene inherited from his dam. Yampa Sue
traces in an unbroken line of chestnuts carrying silver—or actual
silvers mistakenly registered as chestnut—to the source of silver in
the Morgan breed, Dan (Headlight Morgan x Kate B). Dan, foaled
in 1916, was a chestnut that carried the silver gene.
The Butterields knew Persuader was an unusual color; he
reminded them of the silver dapple Shetland they had. But silver
was not known to exist in Morgans at that time.
In the spring of 1983, SH Crescent foaled an odd colored illy
by Persuader that the family named Foxton Felicia. “She was a pale
silvery-grey, like an old fence rail. I was excited to have a ‘charcoal
palomino’ as I thought of the color,” Nancy remembers. “The
Morgan people told us to just register her as chestnut, even though
that didn’t seem right,” adds Barbara. Indeed, because Felicia was a
black silver. We now know that at the time of her birth, there were
just a handful of them in the breed.
A bit more quiet than her dam, Felicia was still a sensitive,
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high energy animal, both on the ground
and under saddle. “We always rode her with
just a halter, though she was also ine with a
snafle bit,” Nancy recalls. “I never had any
troubles with her, so didn’t hesitate to ride
her down to be bred in 1989. I was pregnant
with my second boy. We were just a quarter
mile from the corrals. Beavers had been
making ponds along the stream below the
road. As a consequence, ducks had located
those ponds that spring. As Felicia and I
came along, the ducks lew noisily quacking
into the air. All of a sudden, we were six foot
above the road, facing the other direction!
My heart pounding, I was very glad to still
be on her back. But, I was quick to hop
off to lead her back onto the road. Nearly
home, I was happy to proceed on foot, due
to my own interesting condition.”
Besides being used as a broodmare,
Felicia also dabbled in competitive trail
riding. In 1992 the mare was leased to Chip
Cooper, and the team competed in the
NATRC Top of the World competitive trail
ride. “They did pretty well together, as he
was a novice,” Nancy says. “Felicia drew the
line at his looking at his map while on his
back; she never did like crinkly sounds!”
As she got older, Felicia’s mane and
tail darkened, which is not uncommon in
silvers as they age. It is easy to see how they
are mistaken for chestnut. At age 15, Felicia
foaled her third and inal offspring. This
was a silver tobiano part Morgan mare, RV
Serena, by the ranch’s part Morgan tobiano,
RV Eagle Feather.
In 2001, 18-year-old Felicia went to
a friend of the Harrises as a companion
horse. Sadly she colicked the following
winter and did not survive. Felicia would
produce only two full Morgan offspring in
her short lifetime, but both were silvers and
would found silver dynasties of their own.
in her current retirement home with Lisa
Bock-Holec of Senoia, Georgia. Fawn had
six foals, at least four of which are known
to be silvers like their dam. They include S
Bar B Blksaddle Chester (by H-Saracen),
1994 brown silver stallion (later gelded)
owned by Spruce Hill Farms in Westkill,
NY; Whitings Bright Star (by Foxton Black
Jack), 1998 black silver mare owned by
Karleen Gose of St Onge, SD; Whitings
Fancy Star (by Foxton Debonair), 1999
black silver mare owned by Joyce Urroz of
Custer, SD; and Whitings Smoky Debonair
(by Foxton Debonair), 2000 black silver
gelding owned by Carroll Whiting of Blue
Rapids, KS.
When Bobbie Zeulner irst saw S Bar
B Blksaddle Chester, she thought he was
a dark palomino—“that’s what I get for
doing my own thinking,” Bobbie quips.
Chester only sired two offspring before
being gelded, but one of them was the
previously mentioned brown silver stallion
Zeulners’Sunka Wakan—the horse who
ultimately proved to all of Morgandom
that yes, silver did exist in Morgans when
he DNA tested as being black based, not
red based, in 2002. Sunka sustained an
injury to his front legs as a youngster,
so he never had a formal career under
saddle, but he could be trusted to carry the
Zeulners’ grandchildren safely. Everyone
who knew the stallion remarked upon his
sweet and kind nature. Sadly, Sunka’s last
owner Carrie Duff of Hazel Run Morgans
in Georgetown Lake, MT, found him
entangled in a gate one morning in April
of 2010. He did not survive. Fortunately,
the Zeulners had frozen semen from
Sunka, so he may yet contribute more
silvers to the breed.
Sunka sired just 10 offspring in his
too-short lifetime, four of which were
silver. The irst was Zeulners’Marvelous
Robert (x Zeulners’Marvelous Melody),
a 2001 chestnut (carrying silver) stallion
owned by Angie Nadon of Anfarra
Morgans in Bailieboro, ON. Robert is a
multi-champion in hand and Western
pleasure horse. Angie had previously
purchased Robert’s chestnut (also a silver
carrier) daughter, Zeulners Linda Lee. “I
was looking for a smaller Morgan mare
with an outstanding temperament for our
six–year-old daughter to eventually ride
Foxton FaWn: the
Beginning oF a legaCy
Felicia’s irst foal, Foxton Fawn (by Society
Statusmaster), was born in 1987. Registered
as chestnut like her dam, she was actually
a brown-based silver—proven not only
by her offspring’s colors, but by the fact
that—many years later—she would test
homozygous for black base color! Sold as
a yearling, the high tempered little mare
went through six owners before landing
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DeSCenDantS oF Foxton Smokey DaWn
Right: Foxton Frosty Dawn (Foxton Society Beau x Foxton Smokey
Dawn), 2002 brown silver mare, with her 2006 bay silver colt
Unconventional (by Gone Gold). Below, left to right: Lisa Holec
with the author’s 2007 smoky black silver illy, Positively Charmed
(Gone Gold x Foxton Frosty Dawn). Lisa owns “Charli’s” aunt,
Foxton Fawn; The yearling buckskin silver illy, Edgeield Vermeil
(Edgeield Sun Gold x Foxton Frosty Dawn) and Rachel Longacre
compete in a halter class at an open 4H show; Coulee Bend Pure
Silver (Unconventional x Dody Little Bell SRDA), a chestnut
(carrying silver) 2010 colt, is now living in Alaska with Pat Kearney;
Coulee Bend Orion (Unconventional x Coulee Bend Contessa),
a 2009 chestnut (carrying silver) colt pictured here as a weanling,
will stand his irst season in 2011 for owner Linda Sterling.
and show,” Angie says. Linda Lee it the bill. Then Robert became
available, and Angie purchased him as well. Robert’s irst foals for
Angie will arrive this year, and Linda Lee’s irst foal was born in
2010, a chestnut (carrying silver) illy, Anfarra Carrera (CN), by
Anfarra Que Barbaro.
Schaenzer’s Silver Eagle (x Granaway Bonne Amie), a 2004
brown silver stallion, was Sunka’s second silver offspring. He is
owned by Ken Thomas in Richield Utah, where he is adding the
silver dilution to Ken’s band of gaited mares, the goal being to
produce gaited silver Morgans. Eagle’s 2009 black silver son, KTM
Shadowlax (x KTM Shadow Dancer), is now owned by Silver
Eagle’s breeder, Susanna Schaenzer of Eugene OR. He will be bred
this year for a few 2012 foals.
Sunka’s next silver son was Zeulners Silver Legacy (x Oregon
N Blacksaddle XTC), a 2005 black silver who was owned by Linda
Sterling of Sterling Morgan Horses in Chino Valley, AZ. Linda
recalls how she came to ind him: “Looking around for my very
own stallion in 2005, I came across an ad for a weanling stallion,
Zeulners Silver Legacy, who had the silver dapple gene. All this
‘silver’ and ‘Sterling’ seemed like the hand of providence, and this
little guy sure was cute! Several potential buyers were considering
him, but they wanted him tested to see if he was homozygous black
irst. I jumped in and bought him. He later tested homozygous
black with one silver gene (EEZz). He was the only silver Morgan
stallion who was also homozygous black. I had hit the jackpot!”
“Legacy had a quiet calm disposition and always passed this on
to his get,” Linda continues. Of his 18 foals, the handsome stallion
sired eight silvers, all illies except for his last foal, LMSterling
Shining Knight, a 2010 black silver colt Linda is keeping as his sire’s
replacement. Sadly, on December 19, 2009, Linda found Legacy
dead in the pasture. “It appeared he had died suddenly and quietly:
there were no thrash marks around him. A necropsy later revealed
he had an intestinal hernia into his diaphragm,” she says. Zeulners
Silver Legacy left the breed a grand “legacy” of eight additional
silvers for the breed. However, in the space of a few short months
the Morgan world had lost two of its rare silver stallions—quite a
blow to such a tiny genetic pool.
The last foal sired by Sunka is the appropriately named Zeulners
Last Hurrah (x Renwood Lila B), a 2008 chestnut (carrying silver)
stallion bred by the Zeulners and recently sold. Shortly afterwards
the Zeulners disbanded their Morgan herd. Their small breeding
program had made a huge contribution to the Morgan world, and
without their efforts we might never have discovered that silver still
existed in the Morgan breed.
The only other silver offspring of Foxton Fawn that has bred
on is Whitings Bright Star. She has had two buckskin silver colts
for her owner Karleen Gose: Inyan Silver Sage (by HMSTD Rum
Runner) in 2006 and Inyan Silver Buckshot (by HMSTD Electric
Cowboy) in 2008.
the Foxton Smokey DaWn Family
Foxton Felicia’s other registered Morgan daughter is the 1990 black
silver mare, Foxton Smokey Dawn (Topside Midnight x Foxton
Felicia). Dawn’s sire, Topside Midnight, was the 1982 AMHA Open
Competition winner at irst and second level dressage, ridden by
14-year-old Laura Paling-Claborn. “I regret that we didn’t have
Topside Midnight long enough to produce more silver dapples
from Felicia. There wasn’t the interest in the color at that time,”
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Nancy muses now. The black stallion’s quiet
disposition was a good cross for Felicia.
Foxton Smokey Dawn has the laidback
personality of her sire. She is used as a
pony horse for youngsters, and for moving
horses around the ranch.
This is the smaller of the two branches
of the Felicia family, but it is a growing
one! Dawn has had 5 registered Morgan
offspring for Foxton Morgans. Her irst foal
was a silver illy that unfortunately did not
survive. Her second foal is Dawn’s only other
silver offspring to date, the 2002 brown
silver mare Foxton Frosty Dawn (by Foxton
Society Beau). Purchased by the author at
three days of age from Foxton, Frosty has a
friendly, people loving personality and an
amusing love of water. On hot days she will
“volunteer” for showers by standing by the
pasture gate and begging to be hosed off.
Frosty has gone on to carry the torch for
her dam in a big way— she has had four
foals so far, and all four have been silvers!
Frosty’s irst foal was born in 2006
and was by the palomino stallion Gone
Gold. Bred by the author, the colt was
named “Unconventional,” both because of
his unusual color—he is a bay silver—and
because of the circumstances surrounding
his birth. I was scheduled to speak on
Morgan color genetics at the AMHA
Convention in February 2006. Frosty went
overdue and I could not leave her to go to
Convention. Hence the colt was my UN
Convention!
“Connor” as he is known to his friends,
is now owned by Lyle and Cindy Dietz of
Coulee Bend Morgans in Galahad, Alberta.
“When we started our search for a new
colt to add to our breeding program, we
looked for all the usual things,” Cindy
says. “The colt had to be outstanding
Morgan type, be an easy, natural mover
showing great athleticism—length of
stride and impulsion. He had to have
great conformation and that little extra
‘something’ that drew your eye back for a
second, then a third look. He had to have
a soft eye, chiseled features, and of course,
the Morgan attitude—that is curious,
willing, personable and very trainable. We
found those attributes in Unconventional.
These were all irst and foremost—and as
an added bonus—‘Connor’ is a rare silver
dapple bay.”
Connor has sired three registered
Morgan foals so far and two have inherited
his silver gene. The eldest, a chestnut (silver
carrier) Coulee Bend Orion (x Coulee Bend
Contessa), is now owned by Linda Sterling
of Sterling Morgan Horses. A two-year-old
in 2011, Orion will breed a few select mares
for Linda this year. Connor’s other silver
offspring is the 2010 colt Coulee Bend Pure
Silver (x Dody Little Bell SRDA), also a
chestnut silver carrier, now living in Alaska
with Pat Kearney.
Foxton Frosty Dawn was bred back to
Gone Gold and in 2007, Positively Charmed
was foaled. ‘Charli’ color tested to have both
her sire’s cream gene and her dam’s silver
gene, on a black base coat, making her the
irst (and so far only) smoky black silver
in the breed. Charli’s friendly personality
endears her to everyone she meets, and
she inherited her dam’s love of water—no
water trough is safe from her attempts at
swimming! Charli is owned by the author,
and plans are to eventually breed her.
In late 2007 Char Cook of Edgeield
Morgans in Goshen, IN leased Frosty,
and the following year the plucky little
mare added a third silver to her incredible
production record. Edgeield Vermeil is a
beautiful buckskin silver illy by the Cook’s
Sunup Neptune son, Edgeield Sun Gold.
“Maddie is a real diva,” Charlene says.
“Whenever anyone comes to visit, she
knows they are here to see her, and runs to
the barn for attention. She has a heart of
gold, and loves people.” Maddie has been
successfully shown in open halter classes
by Rachel Longacre, one of Char’s young
riding students. Her color has attracted
much attention at those shows!
Frosty was leased again, this time to
Candi Rousseau of Tocara Farm Morgans
in North Bennington, VT. “The spunky,
sweet brown silver dapple mare Foxton
Frosty Dawn came to us simply by good
timing,” Candi says. “I decided in 2009
that I would like to add a little silver into
our small herd of mostly duns here. I just
happened to mention to Frosty’s then-
owner Laura Behning what I was looking
for. Bloodlines are always an important
part of my decisions of what mares to
permanently add into our program and I
love what Laura has done with her silver
dapples. I love a good blend of Jubilee
King, Flyhawk and Lippitt. When she
offered Frosty to me for a lease, I jumped
at the chance.” It did not take long before
Frosty was part of the family. “We run a
youth program here and one of the girls
took a liking right away to Frosty,” Candi
says. The mare endeared herself to the
youngsters, not only because of her friendly
nature but because her smaller size was less
threatening to the more timid children.
Candi purchased Frosty shortly before she
gave birth to her fourth foal, who was—
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