Commercial Crossbred
A commercial crossbred mule is a deliberately produced horse-donkey hybrid, usually from a jack donkey bred to a mare chosen for a market purpose. The mare may be a draft horse for logging and wagon work, a saddle or gaited mare for trail riding, a stock horse for ranch use, or a pony for a smaller riding or packing mule. Because mules are almost always sterile, this is not a breeding population; each animal reflects the donkey sire, the mare's breed and build, and the handling it received as a youngster. Common colors include bay, black, chestnut, gray, dun, buckskin, palomino, and pinto when the parents carry those genes.
People buy commercial crossbred mules for sure-footed work, endurance, and a reputation for self-preservation, but quality varies as much as in horses. Sound feet and legs, a sensible start under saddle or harness, and a saddle that fits the mule's narrower body matter more than a label. They often maintain weight easily, so lush pasture and rich feed need watching. Patient, consistent training is especially important because a frightened or confused mule may resist rather than rush through pressure.
Colors: Bay, Black, Brown, Buckskin, Chestnut, Dun, Gray, Grey, Grullo, Palomino, Piebald, Pinto, Red Dun, Red Roan, Roan, Skewbald, Sorrel, Spotted, White