Chakouyi
The Chakouyi is a Chinese horse breed or regional type most often treated as a northern or northwestern working horse rather than a modern international performance breed. Information about it can be thin outside Chinese livestock references, so it is safest to understand the Chakouyi as a practical local horse shaped by transport, farm work, and riding needs in its home area. It is typically discussed as hardy, medium to small in size, and useful in terrain where simple reliability has more value than specialized conformation.
For owners or researchers, the Chakouyi deserves documentation that keeps local names, source herds, and breeding context attached to each animal. Imported or crossbred examples may vary, and registry expectations may differ depending on the source. Good management would emphasize basic equine soundness, sensible workload, and conservation of the local type, especially if the horse is being represented as Chakouyi rather than as a general Chinese riding horse.
Colors: Amber Champagne, Bay, Bay Dun, Bay Roan, Black, Blanket Appaloosa, Blue Roan, Brown, Buckskin, Champagne, Chestnut, Classic Champagne, Cremello, Dun, Dun Roan, Fewspot Appaloosa, Flaxen Chestnut, Frame Overo, Gold Champagne, Gray, Grey, Grullo, Leopard Appaloosa, Liver Chestnut, Overo, Palomino, Perlino, Piebald, Pinto, Rabicano, Red Dun, Red Roan, Roan, Sabino, Seal Bay, Silver Dapple, Skewbald, Smoky Black, Smoky Cream, Snowcap Appaloosa, Sorrel, Splash White, Tobiano, Tovero, Varnish Roan, White