I have a 2 month old calf who is still a dun colour. Her mother ia a red-factored black and her sire just black. I know they can change colour as their calf coat sheds out, but how long does this take? I want to tatoo her ear but don't know what colour to use as the ears are still light coloured.
Kathy ???
Colour change
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The tinge can take quite a few months to go, as black grows in, usually head and feet first, then the body. If there is doubt I think it is most often the case that the calf is black. Look at the hooves - if they are black and the nose and tongue is black it is almost certainly a black calf. I had my first dun calf born here this spring, and what struck me most was that whilst the coat was still wet after the birth, the skin showed through and was a much lighter colour than the coat, most unlike a black. At 1 month his hooves are mostly light, and the muzzle is grey. The reds I have had born here have always looked a very distinct red from the moment they appeared.
Duncan
Duncan
Duncan MacIntyre
Burnside Dexters 00316
Burnside
Ascog
Isle of Bute
Burnside Dexters 00316
Burnside
Ascog
Isle of Bute
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Thanks for the observations. I have only ever seen one dun in my life (and didn't like it!). I have 3 red Dexters at the moment (one was born this am) and they are very distinct. The trouble with this "dun" heifer is her nose is not black nor are her feet or her ear skin. Might her skin darken with age? She really is quite beautiful at this stage anyways. Is it possible for a black red-factored cow and a black bull to produce dun? I could never understand the genetics with that colour! :p
Kathy
Kathy
Kathy
Home Farm, Vancouver Island, Canada
Home Farm, Vancouver Island, Canada
I am hoping you are going to find you like dun after all. There is ‘dun’ and ‘dun’. I have seen animals described as ‘dun’ that I didn’t like at all, usually pale and washed out, and the result of a gene carried on from some distant outcross in the past. True dun which is a deep vibrant colour, I love, I wouldn’t like to lose it in my own herd. You do say she is beautiful at present. It is uncommon for that combination of parent colours to produce a dun, but possible. Long may you continue to think her beautiful!