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Chapter Eight
APPENDIX: THE ANIMAL KINFOLK
In the Beginning there was a wild horse, and that horse was man…
-Ancient Babylonian Myth.
Very little has been written on wild horses and most people simply assume that they are similar to
domestic steeds. In reality, however, wild equines are as different from tame horses as wolves are from
dogs. As in wolves, wild horses live in extended family groups that have a strict pecking order. The herd is
led by a lead mare and stallion. The stallion is dominant in most situations for it is his job to scout ahead to
find good pasture, keep the herd safe from predators, and locate safe water and places to rest. The lead
mare on the other hand keeps order in the herd and decides the herd’s movement, leading the band as it
moves in single file in order of rank as the stallion brings up the rear. Next come the mature mares and their
young (foals have the same rank as their mother until they are weaned) in order of age.
Rank order is maintained by pantomime aggression, instead of kicking another horse the lead mare
may simply lift a hoof or instead of biting she may simply snarl. Other facial expressions include smiling
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(ears up and mouth partially open without showing the teeth) and a variety of angry expressions ranging
from a closed mouth frown (with the ears back) to a true snarl with the ears back and the teeth showing.
Submissive herd members show their status by lowering their head and tail and clacking their teeth.
Stallions often show a gesture called snaking that looks ferocious (the male lowers his head and snakes it
forward while snarling) but is really a signal for the herd to move because the stallion senses danger.
The mares and their young remain united whether or not the stallion is present. If he dies or leaves
the herd for any reason the normal family existence continues until another male adopts the herd.
Sometimes (especially during the mating season, which is February to March in the northern hemisphere) a
displaced young stallion may attempt to take a herd away from another stallion by force. If the old stallion
is defeated, the herd accepts the new male without any disturbance to the rank relationships (however
individual mares have been known to flee back to their chosen stallion when they have the chance). Unlike
many mammals the new male does not kill the young of the previous male but those young stallions that
are old enough to leave their mother may go with their father when he leaves the herd.
It is commonly believed that stallions drive off or kill their young colts while the young mares stay
in the herd but this is a falsehood. In reality the young stallions leave their family groups when they are
around three years old, not because they are driven off (indeed they may be on very good terms with their
father), but because they wish to start a life of their own. Groups of adolescent males form bachelor herds
of around fifteen animals that have no apparent rank order. This group of friends eventually breaks up as
members meet available fillies or encounter an unrelated group of
mares and form their own herd.
Of course the lifestyle described above differs somewhat according to species. The wild asses and
grevy’s zebra live in smaller groups and do not migrate when food becomes scarce. Instead the males and
females separate into same sex herds that occupies different areas of the territory until food is plentiful
again. The courtship behavior also varies with species. In most equines the male prances around the female,
tossing his mane and nickering. Grevy’s zebra and onagers however mark out an area with dung and urine
and any female who wishes to mate with him simply enters his territory. In contrast to the lek behavior of
the previous two species the African wild ass engages in ritual combat, a female not choosing a male that
she can defeat in battle. Once pregnant all wild equines carry their young for one full year and the newborn
is able to walk within hours of being born.
Some herds have to deal with interference by man. In this case there is a yearly roundup of the
horses and many of the mares and foals are sold at auction while almost all the males are either killed or
gelded. The remaining females are set free with only those few males that the government decides are
worth breeding. Sometimes the males released are not even of the same breed but are domestic stallions
that the men hope will contaminate the bloodline. This “management” often “improves the breed” (I.e.
makes the horses look more like domestic animals) but makes the horses less fit to survive in the wild.
Most of the wild equines treated in this fashion are the wild ponies of Europe and America, Mustangs and
Brumbies.
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Most people think horses have limited vocalizations but equines do more than neigh. The calls of
equines fall into three basic types: the whinny, nicker, and blow. These sounds correspond respectively to
the howl, whine, and barking of wolves. The whinny (a sound that varies from the neigh of true horses to
the braying of the asses and the barking of the zebras) is a low pitched sound that carries for several miles
and is used to communicate over a long distances, to call another member of the herd, to call other herds
(stallions will often call to one another so that they will not intrude on each others territory) and to welcome
back missing herd mates. The nicker is a low vibrating sound used by mothers to call their foals and as a
submissive call between adults. The blow is an unusual sound that is made by exhaling sharply through the
nose. In pitch and loudness this call is exactly like a dog’s bark and is used when the horse senses
something unusual, to get the attention of the herd, or to signal a neutral state of mind without the
aggression of a scream (the horse equivalent of a growl) or the submission of a nicker.
Horses have excellent senses of hearing and smell. They also have the largest eyes of any land
mammal and the eyes are placed on the sides of the head, an arrangement that allows the horse to see in a
wider arc than man. In horses the only blind spot is directly behind the animal. Unfortunately this eye
placement allows for less depth perception than the eyesight of men or wolves. In addition all equines are
far sighted and have trouble focusing on things that are close up through their distance vision is superb.
Horses do see in color but have trouble distinguishing between yellows and greens. Their night vision is
equivalent to that of a wolf. All together the vision of horses is better than that of rats so there is no more
need for special vision rules for Ashringa in equine form than there is for Rat-kin in rodent form so none
are given in these rules.
Horses are also among the most intelligent of animals and come out as number six on animal IQ
tests. In these tests the order of the most to least intelligent are humans, apes, dolphins, elephants, wolves,
horses, pigs, goats, cattle, deer, kangaroos, sheep and rats. Donkeys, mules, and onagers are even more
intelligent than true horses so much so that one scientist declared that “the dumbest jackass on earth is a
genius compared to the smartest horse that ever lived.” the IQ of wild equines has never been studied but it
is likely that it is closer to the donkey level than that of the pampered domestic horse much as wolves score
higher on IQ tests than domestic dogs. Even so domestic horses have learned how to open their stable
doors, turn on lights, and even how to line dance to western country music!
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Mountain Zebra (Equus [Hippotigris] zebra): the first
zebra to be discovered was called the Berkwagga,
Wildepaard, or Dauw by the Native Africans. It was the
smallest zebra at only 12 hands high, seven feet long
and 500 lbs. In appearance it resembles a short eared
donkey with a dewlap of skin hanging from its throat.
There are two distinct types of Mountain Zebra, The
Cape (E. zebra zebra) inhabits Namibia and the west
coast of South Africa and the Hartmann’s (E. zebra
hartimannae) inhabits central South Africa. The Cape
variety is white with a brownish black muzzle and
stripes of the same color extending all the way to the
hooves. Hartmann’s is slightly larger (571 lbs.) and
appears whiter due to the fact that its stripes are much
narrower than the Cape subspecies.
Mountain zebras were once very common but by 1850 the Cape variety was almost exterminated.
The only survivors were a few herds that lived on land owned by Boer farmers. In 1937 one of these farms
was bought by the South African government and declared to be Mountain Zebra National Park. By that
time only six animals (five stallions and a mare) inhabited the area. By 1950 this number had dropped to
two so a neighboring farmer named J. K. Lombaard, donated his herd of five stallions and six mares. In
1964 the herd had grown to 25 and the “Doornhoek” herd of 30 was added to the park. Today there are still
only 600 Cape zebras throughout the world. Hartmann’s Mountain zebra did much better but even it has
dropped from a high of 50,000 animals in 1956 to only 5,000-8,000 today.
Plains Zebra (Equus [Hippotigris] burchelli): the most abundant of all zebras this species comes in three
surviving races and two that are provisionally extinct. The two extinct forms are the quagga (E. b. quagga)
and the bontiquagga (E. b. burchelli). The quagga inhabited most of South Africa and had a brown head
and body, white legs and tail and black stripes on its head, neck and shoulders. Sometimes the stripes
would persist as appaloosa spots on the rump but most were almost solid brown. The bontiquagga of South
Africa’s East coast, in contrast, was almost pure white with pale stripes only on its head, neck and upper
back. Both were exterminated by over hunting and both were selected by the South African Museum’s
Quagga Project in 1988 to be recreated by selectively breeding Chapman’s zebras with the proper
markings. In November 1991 the fist foal displaying proper quagga coloration was born. The project
continues with assistance from cloning and it is hoped that soon all zebra species will once again roam
Africa’s savannahs.
Grant’s (or Böhm’s) Zebra (Equus burchelli granti): this is the most common of all zebras. Its
range extends from southern Sudan, Ethiopia, and Somalia, south into Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania. This
is the zebra of Tsavo National Park and the Ngorongoro crater. In appearance it is pony like and quite
variable in color. Most are white with wide black stripes that encircle the belly and reach to the hooves but
a few are black with white stripes or even black with white spots like a snowflake appaloosa!
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Selous Zebra (Equus burchelli selousi): this zebra resembles Grant’s subspecies but the stripes
are narrower, more numerous and sometimes do not cover the belly. Faint brownish shadow stripes may
mark the hindquarters. Selous Zebra ranges from the Lower Zambezi River south to the Limpopo River in
Mozambique, eastern Zambia and Malawi.
The dun and white tarpan had roamed Europe since the
ice age and was held sacred by the native tribes. In Celtic myth
they were the sacred animals of Rhiannon, the Earth Mother, and a
“were-tarpan” was said to have founded the royal line of Russia.
The commoners deliberately staked their pony mares in the open in
the hope that they would have colts sired by their wild relatives as
the results were prized for their stamina and intelligence. This
lasted until the sixteenth century when Henry the VIII, king of
England passed a law that effectively allowed only the nobility to
own horses. This was the Bill for the Breeding of Horses that
called for the extermination of any horse less than 14 hands in
height. As a result in England, and to a lesser extent Europe, all
ponies (including the tarpans) were viciously hunted to near
extinction.
It was during this period of extermination that ponies became associated with the little people. It
was claimed that the reason there are still ponies in Ireland is because the Faeries took them Underhill until
the King’s law was changed. Unfortunately the law was not repealed until the nineteenth century and by
then the last pureblooded tarpan had become extinct. Today the Avarim find equine breeding stock in the
feral ponies of Europe and North America and in the hybrid tarpans found in wildlife parks and zoos. In
most of these horses a yearly roundup in which the foals are sold at auction is performed, an action that
means that most Avarim are of Homid breed as most Equine Avarim make their first change in captivity.
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the last wild European tarpan (the plains species) was killed in a desperate attempt to avoid capture and the
last tarpan on earth died only eight years later in the Munich Zoo. The Polish government in a desperate
attempt to preserve the species collected a number of ponies with tarpan blood and set them loose in the
forest reserves of Bialowlieza and Popieleno. Many years later several takhi (Przewalski’s horses) were
released in the reserves to try to overwhelm the last of the domestic blood. Today experts argue over
whether the species was preserved or restored but its appearance suggests that it is as pure as its takhi
relative. It is a small equine (6 ½ feet long, 13 hands tall, and weighing 750 lbs.) with a lighter build than
the takhi and with a more flowing mane. In the summer it is a blue grey (grulla) color fading to snow white
in the winter.
Caspian Pony (Equus [Equus] caballus aquilius): this is a form of the domestic horse descended from the
Plateau tarpan (E. caballus ferus ferus) and by 3000 BC it was tamed for use by the Egyptian charioteers.
In time it was bred for larger size and crossed with other tarpan types to create the Arabian and other
“warm blooded” horse breeds and the original strain was believed to have died out. In 1965 a few herds of
this variety were discovered running wild in the Elburtz Mountains near the Caspian Sea. Captured Caspian
ponies were soon re-domesticated and can now be found as a riding horse worldwide. Caspian ponies
resemble miniature Arabian horses only 9-12 hands tall. In color they are gray, brown, bay, or chestnut.
White markings on the head and legs are rare.
European Breeds: Germany is home to two breeds, the Senner which is almost extinct (or is
extinct according to some authorities) which inhabits the forest of Teutoberger Wald, and the Dulmen
which now numbers less than 100 animals and is found in the Meerfelder Bruch reserve in Westphalia,
which are 12 hands tall and black, brown, or dun in color. Another breed can be found in the forest of
Hojsta on Sweden’s Gotland Island. The Gotland is common in captivity and is 12-13 hands high and dun,
black, bay, chestnut, gray, or palomino in color. France has three breeds of feral pony. The Basque region
has the Pottock which resembles a large with whiskers on its upper lip which protect its nose from the
thorny plants it eats and comes in black, brown, bay, chestnut and pinto. The Camarguais (gray, bay, or
brown) and the Merens (which is always black in color) are slightly larger (13-14 hands high) and are
especially loved by the Gypsy peoples.
Brittish Breeds: There are two wild ponies remaining in Britain. These are the Welsh and new
Forest ponies. The last wild Welsh ponies can be found in the mountains of Wales where several Arabian
horses released into the area have made it a near twin of the Caspian. Another pony is found only in the
New Forest preserve in England. These New Forest ponies are 12-14 hands tall and come in all equine
colors except pinto and tyger.
The Canadian breed is the Sable Island pony. This 14 hands tall
tarpan like pony is said to be descended from French ponies that
were abandoned on the tiny treeless Island in the eighteenth
century. There are currently only 300 Sable Island ponies in the
world and they are gray, black, brown, bay, or dark chestnut in
color.
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More famous is the Chincoteague pony of the United States. These ponies are 12 hands tall and
are found only on Assateague Island off West Virginia. According to legend they are the descendants of
Caspian ponies that escaped from a Moorish ship that sank near the Island during the early days of
American exploration. In colonial times Shetland ponies were released onto the island which caused the
native horses to diminish in size, changed the color to pinto, and made the breed more massive in build. In
the early 20th century the release of several Welsh ponies onto Assateague Island restored some of the
original pony’s quality. For decades the ponies were rounded up by the volunteer fire department of
Chincoteague Island on the last Thursday and Friday in July. The horses were then swum across the narrow
channel between the two islands where the foals were sold at auction. Recently the American government
has fenced off the ponies from most of Assateague island claiming that the ponies harm the wetlands. This
move that has angered the people of Chincoteague who point out that the ponies have lived on the island
for centuries without affecting the wetlands and that the fence was actually built to keep the ponies from
their main grazing land and shelter from storms. This view seems to be correct for hurricanes have
devastated the herds since the fence was built making “pony penning day” a thing of the past.
Kulan (Equus [Assinus] hemionus kulan kulan): this subspecies (and its extinct kin the Anatolian ass [E.
h. kulan anatoliensis] which died out in Roman times and the Syrian ass [E. h. kulan hemippus] who died
out in 1930) are sometimes classed as Onagers and sometimes as Dzigettais and sometimes as their own
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subspecies by scientists. The living race once roamed from Iran to Mongolia but today it is restricted to
Turkistan and North West Afghanistan. It is the same size and color as the Onager except that the white on
its belly extends onto its flanks and the legs are almost entirely white. The kulan is the fastest equine on
earth and is able to run at over 40 mph. today there are less than 2000 kulans in the world.
Dzigettai (Equus [Assinus] hemionus hemionus): this subspecies is better known in the West as the ghor-
khur and it is a large demi-ass (13 hands tall) from Mongolia’s Gobi desert and the plains of east
Kazakhstan, Manchuria, Balkash, and Kansu. It resembles a kulan in markings but differs in having a
reddish gold coat with a black dorsal stripe, mane and tail. There are less than 300 of these animals in the
world.
The unicorn is to come in the shape of an incomparable man, a revealer of mysteries, supernatural and
divine, and a great lover of mankind.
- N. McCloud, “An Epitome of the Ancient History of Japan”.
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Yonaguni (Equus [Equus] caballus ibericus): a pony of the Mongolian type that runs wild in two herds on
Okinawa Island in Japan. Like most feral ponies the Yonaguni is rounded up yearly for vaccinations and to
have the “excess” foals auctioned off. These tiny (11 hands tall) ponies are used as kinfolk by both the
Nabrima and those few Killina who still live in Japan.
One by one in the moonlight there, Neighing far off on the haunted air, The unicorns come down to the
sea.
- Corbin Aiken, “Evening Song”.
Brumby (Equus [Equus] caballus caballus): the brumby is the descendant of many domestic horse
breeds, including ponies and draft horses, which were abandoned in the outback by the early settlers of
Australia. These horses were allowed to run wild and eventually reverted to a wild type much like the
American mustang. Unlike the Mustang however the brumby has become so wild that it is practically
untamable. In size the Brumby ranges from 13 to 15 hands high and comes in all equine colors. In the
1960’s the Australian government declared war on the brumby, claiming that they ate grass meant for
sheep, and began to shoot at them from trucks and helicopters. Today the brumby is very rare and inhabits
only the most remote areas of the outback.
“The mustang doesn’t just belong to Nevada. He is a symbol of freedom to all. He is our American
heritage, as meaningful as the battlefield at Yorktown or the White Church at Lexington. Even more so,
because he is a living symbol!”
- Wild Horse Annie during her famous trial to illegalize mustanging.
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restricted to the isolated desert mountains of California and Nevada. In the early 1500’s the first Spaniards
landed on the east coast of Mexico and, as the eastern Indian tribes knew nothing of horses, they treated the
Spanish horses as supernatural beasts. By the time the first Europeans traveled to the west it had become “a
fact” that America had no wild horses so any seen by the explorers “had to be escaped domestic steeds”.
Thus the myth that all of America’s horses died out over 12,000 years age became part of the history books
despite the insistence of the Indians of Nevada and California that there were “horses before there were
horses” and the presence of American cave drawings and sculptures in that area of horses that date from
before the coming of the Spanish!
Today there is conflict between the government, which wants to exterminate the horse (which it
regards as a non-native species) from America’s national parks, and the average citizen who sees the
mustang as the very symbol of the west. The latter recently received confirmation of their view in 1993
when miners working in Alaska dug up a mummified horse. Analysis showed that it was over 26,000 years
old but when genetic tests were done this supposed new species (the remains were dubbed Equus lambi)
turned out to be genetically identical to the living mustang! The fight to change the status of the American
horse from “feral pest” to an endangered species is currently being fought by the National Mustang
Association and the Nhrim are in the thick of the battle.
By 1925 the U.S. government decided to expand cattle ranching in the west. As an excuse to remove the
mustang from public land once and for all the government claimed there were now too many mustangs. In
actuality the herds had already dropped from a high of over two million animals to less than a million. They
passed a law that allowed any unbranded horse to be sold by anyone who captured it. These horses were
then sold for $2.00-$3.00 each to pet food plants. In 1934 congress demoted the wild horse from “wildlife”
to “feral pest” and gave permission for them to be rounded up out of the national parks and sold for profit.
By the end of the 1950’s more then 100,000 mustangs in Nevada alone were killed to make chicken feed.
In 1959 Mrs. Velma C. Johnston, better known as Wild Horse Annie, was driving along a country
road when she saw a truck leaking blood and gore. Curious she followed the truck to a slaughter house and
to her horror saw that the truck was full of mustangs. The wheelchair bound young woman disfigured by
polio filmed the atrocities committed by the mustangers. She filmed them as they chased their quarry in
helicopters while shooting at them to make them run over sharp rocks until their hooves were nothing but
bloody stumps until they finally chased them over cliffs to break their legs. The horses were then tied up
with barbed wire and piled atop one another in the trucks which then carted them away to the rendering
plants. Though ridiculed by politicians (who nicknamed the woman “Horse-Faced Annie”) the public was
outraged by this misuse of tax dollars and forced the passing of the Wild Horse Act which prohibited the
hunting of mustangs with airplanes and automobiles.
Despite the Wild Horse Act the hunting continued for the Act did not prevent mustang hunting on
horseback or the selling of branded horses on public land. During this time many mustangs were captured,
branded, and sold to slaughter houses in order to bypass the law. The poaching finally resulted in a massive
public protest that resulted in the Wild Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act that made it a crime to capture,
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brand or kill a wild horse or burro. By now there were less than 10,000 mustangs alive. Nevertheless a
mere ten years later in 1981 the government claimed there were now 55,000 mustangs and began rounding
them up and putting them up for adoption. In 1990 it was revealed that the adoption program was a sham
and that most of the horses were sold to government agents who then sold the mustangs to slaughter
houses. Public outrage was the result but the practice continues. Today there are an estimated 45,000
mustangs but most of these specimens have been bred on farms and ranches for generations as cow or
rodeo ponies and most contain the blood of domestic breeds. The true wild population teeters at only a few
thousand and only the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Refuge in Montana and the Owyhee Desert in Nevada
have sizable herds. Mustangs come in all horse colors and average 15 hands high.
Curlys stand 14-15 hands tall and weigh 800 to 1,100 pounds. They share with the takhi the
unusual feature of having a mane and tail that is completely shed each year. The mane is always double and
the coat comes in all colors including pinto and tyger. The original coat color of palomino in the summer
and pure white in the winter is still common even in hybrid animals. The mane and tail is long and falls in
kinky waves while the body fur varies from only slightly wavy in the summer to long ringlets in the winter.
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a. africanus) inhabited Egypt and the Sudan until the late 1980’s. Today it can be found only on the island
of Socotra in the Indian Ocean where the last known survivors escaped from a zoo and hybridized with
escaped feral donkeys.
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