June 3rd, 2026
Home | Log in!
Welcome to FreshFiction

Are you a reader
or an author?

Help us personalize your experience. Choose your role below.
You can always change this later using the switcher button.

or

You can switch anytime using the floating button.

Limited Time Fresh Fiction Access

Exclusive Marketing Opportunities for Authors

Curious about how Fresh Access helps authors gain more visibility and connect with active readers?

Discover premium promotional opportunities, enhanced exposure, and author-focused services designed to help your books stand out.

Read More →
On Top Shelf
Fresh Pick
WAIT WITH ME
★ Fresh Access for Authors 📚 New Books This Week 📰 Latest News 🎪 Reader Games πŸ–οΈ Summer Kick Off Giveaways

Love, Danger, Homecomings & Heart β€” Your June Reading Escape Starts Here

Slideshow image


Since your web browser does not support JavaScript, here is a non-JavaScript version of the image slideshow:

slideshow image
One disastrous night. One devastating man. One diabolical proposition.


slideshow image
He’s stubborn. She’s tougher. His kid? Already picked the bride.


slideshow image
A small-town second chance wrapped in danger, desire, and Sharon Sala heart.


slideshow image
She came home to save the ranch… and found the cowboy she never forgot.


slideshow image
From reality TV heartbreak to real-life reinvention.


slideshow image
A missing twin. A deadly cartel. One K-9 team caught in the crossfire.


Excerpt of Horse And Pony Colours by Lesley Lodge

Purchase


Author Self-Published
January 2014
On Sale: January 21, 2014
82 pages
ISBN: 1494338866
EAN: 9781494338862
Kindle: B00HA7A772
e-Book
Add to Wish List

Non-Fiction Sports, Non-Fiction Pet-Lover, Young Adult Contemporary

Also by Lesley Lodge:

Horse And Pony Colours, January 2014
e-Book

Excerpt of Horse And Pony Colours by Lesley Lodge

Horse and Pony Colours: Which would you choose? Extract from Chapter Five: Pure Gold - or Yellow? The Palomino Palomino horses are sometimes included under the general heading of "coloured" but I think they deserve an entry of their own. The Palomino is my absolute favourite colour.

Palomino horses have a yellow or golden coat with white
or light cream manes and tails. The exact shade of the
body coat colour can range from cream to a dark gold and
the summer coat of a palomino is usually a slightly
darker shade than its winter coat. Palomino is a colour,
not a breed of horse, as such. Even so, many of the
purest Palomino coloured horses are American, such as the
American Saddlebred horse, and they also tend to be
light, riding horses. You won't see many really big cart
horse types with the Palomino colour, nor many English
racehorses.

One of the most famous film horses ever was Roy Rogers'
horse Trigger and he was a perfect Palomino colour.
Trigger was born in the early 1930s and his original name
was Golden Cloud. Roy Rogers called him Trigger because
he was quick – quick at learning and quick in terms
of speed and so β€˜quick off the trigger'. He stood 15.3
hands high and was part Thoroughbred and part Quarter
Horse. He is said to have cost Rogers $2,500, an
absolutely enormous sum for a horse in the 1930s (very
roughly about Β£22,600 in British money today). Trigger
was no ordinary palomino though. Whereas most palominos
have a creamy yellow coat, Trigger had a stunning golden
coat and a brilliant white and exceptionally long flowing
mane and tail.

Trigger's first film part was in the 1938 film The Adventures of Robin Hood, starring Errol Flynn. Trigger (then still named Golden Cloud) played Maid Marian's horse. Later, he starred in many Western films. Trigger could do more than sixty different tricks. Most amazingly, he could walk 150 steps up on his two back legs. Trigger lived to be over thirty – very old indeed for a horse. A β€˜Trigger' continued to appear in films after he'd retired, however, because the film studios replaced him by first a second and finally a third β€˜Trigger'. One of these, Little Trigger, appeared in the film Son of Paleface, sharing a bed with Bob Hope and snatching the bed covers off Bob every time Bob tried to sleep. If you're watching one of those old films, or maybe the clips on YouTube, you can spot which is the original Trigger by the fact that the white blaze marking on his forehead went right down over his left eye - and only one of his feet had a white marking like a long sock. Another famous Palomino was the star of the TV show Mister Ed, a series about a glamorous talking Palomino. The comedy in Mister Ed was based on the simple idea that the horse could talk and that Wilbur, his owner, knew that his horse could talk, but that the horse refused to talk in front of any other human. Mister Ed did once break this rule by speaking to a child; but then, as Mister Ed confidently said to Wilbur after, β€˜Who would believe a child who said that a horse talked?' Mister Ed had a telephone in his stable so he was able to book lots of strange things and activities for himself. In various episodes, the talking horse flew a kite, went surfing, played baseball or flew an aircraft. Once he even got drunk. Mister Ed also dressed up a lot, wearing, for example, a Beatles wig in one episode, beach costumes in another and a zebra disguise in a third. See the list of useful websites at the end of this book for a website where you can see pictures of Mister Ed.

There were no CGI computer effects in those days so all
horse tricks had to be filmed for real or carefully "cut
and pasted" in the editing process. There was a rumour at
the time that the TV studio had peanut butter smeared on
the horse's gums to make his lips move as though he was
actually talking – when really he was just trying
to move the peanut butter. Another rumour was that no, it
was done by using a clear nylon thread, either physically
to lift his lips or in the form of a knot, invisible to
the camera, placed between his upper front teeth to make
him twitch his lips.

The horse playing Mister Ed could actually perform some
real tricks: he could untie a knotted rope with his
teeth, lie down on command and pick up objects. For the
scenes where he uses the telephone, he would pick up the
phone with his teeth and put it on a shelf. He would then
be filmed picking up a pencil and the camera would cut to
a close shot of a pencil dialling the phone. Mister Ed
also winked frequently, either to the audience or to
Wilbur. His winking would probably have been shot by
filming one eye in close-up when the horse happened to
blink..

Mister Ed won a prize, the Patsy Award for a top animal performer. He was a Palomino gelding, an American Saddlebred. The horse who played Mister Ed was called Bamboo Harvester. Sadly, by 1968, he began to suffer from arthritis and he died in 1970. In a way, though, he lived on, because Pumpkin, the horse who played his double for a few of the stunts and who was also of course a palomino, survived until 1979 and was unofficially called Mister Ed for some events.

It is a Palomino horse that is said to have the record
for the world's longest tail. This American Palomino's
tail measured 22 feet long......

To read on and find out more about palominos and many more horse colours, turn to the book: HORSE AND PONY COLOURS: Which would you choose? Illustrated in colour.

Excerpt from Horse And Pony Colours by Lesley Lodge
All rights reserved by publisher and author

© 2003-2026 off-the-edge.net  all rights reserved Privacy Policy