Crossbred
Crossbred mule is a broad description for a mule whose horse and donkey ancestry does not fit a named type or registry category. A mule is normally the offspring of a male donkey and a female horse; the reverse cross is a hinny, though casual listings sometimes mix the terms. The crossbred label may cover a draft-mare mule, a gaited mule, a stock-type trail mule, or an animal from unknown parents. Body size, ear length, bone, gait, and coat color are all inherited from the particular jack and mare rather than from a standardized mule breed.
Evaluation is practical. For riding, packing, driving, or farm use, match the mule's build and training to the job, then check manners, feet, teeth, and soundness as carefully as with a horse. Many mules are efficient keepers and can become overweight on horse-style rations. Their intelligence rewards clear handling, quiet repetition, and fair boundaries. Since fertile mules are rare, crossbred mule production depends on maintaining suitable donkey jacks and mare lines.
Colors: Bay, Black, Brown, Buckskin, Chestnut, Dun, Gray, Grey, Grullo, Palomino, Piebald, Pinto, Red Dun, Red Roan, Roan, Skewbald, Sorrel, Spotted, White