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Natural Horsemanship Clinics, Riding Lessons, Foals & Baby Donkeys For Sale
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When the English settlers landed at Jamestown in
1607, they were not the only descendants of Europeans in the New World. Spanish explorers had been in the Gulf Coast and
Florida for nearly 100 years. A generation before the landing at Jamestown, Spanish explorers established an outpost on the
York River in eastern Virginia. The Spanish were not pedestrians. Many came mounted on the best horses of Europe.
Since that time, the descendants of these beautiful horses have roamed wild on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. In the
1920s, as many as 6,000 Spanish mustangs covered the beaches and dunes of the sparsely inhabited region. Today, fewer than
125 roam free near Corolla-with another band roaming free at Shackleford Banks, over 150 miles to the south. The wild horses
of Corolla are protected by the Corolla Wild Horse Fund.
At Mill Swamp Indian Horses, we are spearheading an
effort to keep Americas oldest distinct breed of horses from going extinct. By early March 2007, we adopted the only
Corolla stallion in captivity available for breeding and are considering acquiring another stallion to join our beautiful
Corolla mare.
We are actively encouraging the adoption of these docile, highly-trainable horses, and are further
seeking out breeders who would be willing to participate in a breeding program to save these horses. For further information
please send Steve an e-mail @ msindianhorses@aol.com.
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Baton Rouge
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Croatoan
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Manteo
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Saving a Dying Breed
Wild mustangs have been
roaming the Outer Banks of North Carolina for several hundred years. Descendants of horses brought to the New World by Spanish
colonists; they numbered over six thousand as recently as the 1920s. Now only two herds remain wild on the Outer Banks,
the Corolla herd that numbers less than 125 and the Shackleford herd of approximately the same size located 175 miles to the
south near Beaufort, North Carolina.
For several days in late February, a team of inspectors from the Horse of
Americas Registry and the American Indian Horse Registry studied the two herds to determine whether they still demonstrated
the characteristics of the ancient Spanish horses. The inspection included views of the horses in the wild along with observations
of a few captive horses from each herd. The team searched the Corolla Wild Horse Sanctuary looking for skeletal remains order
to confirm that the herd was composed of horses that bore the unique vertebra of the original horses of the Spanish colonists.
Several skeletons were found and the official report of the team of inspectors made it clear that the horses are just what
they have been reputed to bedescendants of Colonial Spanish horses.
Steve Edwards and Rebecca Stevenson
were invited to join the team of inspectors on behalf of the American Indian Horse Registry. Edwards had previously been
granted the opportunity to adopt a young Corolla stallion. Manteo, a wild colt who was removed from the herd for emergency
surgery, became the only Corolla stallion in captivity who was available for breeding. Edwards was quickly taken with the
colt.
We got him home at 4:15 and he was completely halter trained in 45 minutes. Within twenty four hours
he comfortably wore a saddle and took a child on his back, according to Edwards.
Manteo was soon joined
by Baton Rouge, a three-year-old mare who went from wild horse to gentled trail mount in a little over three weeks. A few
weeks later, the Director of the Corolla Wild Horse Fund asked Edwards to take in a mature stallion who was removed from the
herd because he had learned to escape the sanctuary and enter the town of Corolla.
He came to us on March
2 and took a rider within a week, he said of the stallion. Edwards, who has trained wild mustangs captured
from the western ranges, marveled at the gentle nature of their eastern cousins. So far, it appears that they are much
easier to train than any domestic horses that I have run into.
Edwards was not the only member of the inspection
team impressed with the wild horses of the Outer Banks. Vickie Ives, of the Texas-based Karma Farms, adopted a filly from
Corolla and within a few weeks of the expedition had agreed to adopt a young stallion along with a mare that was captured
with him. By doing so, she raised the number of breeding age Corolla stallions in captivity to three. These captive
horses may become part of the foundation stock of Corolla horses of the future. The management plan for the wild herd at
Corolla requires the herd to be maintained at a level of 60 horses or less. According to Edwards, sixty horses are not enough
to provide the genetic diversity to keep the breed alive. Most experts agree that at least 100 horses is the minimum
number to provide a healthy breeding program.
With that in mind, he is seeking to develop a pool of breeders
who will work to create a healthy breeding population of domesticated Corolla horses. He actively promotes the adoption of
these horses from the Corolla Wild Horse Fund and urges all adopters to promptly register their horses with the Horse of the
Americas Registry so a close check can be kept on the bloodlines. Recognizing that not all breeders are in a position to
maintain a stallion on their property, he will offer his stallions breeding service free of charge to any owner of a
Corolla mare.
Rebecca Stevenson, a talented young horse trainer who works with difficult horses at Edwards
Smithfield, Virginia ranch, will gentle several young Corolla horses that have been captured and await adoption. In July,
Stevenson and Edwards will appear at the Wild Horse Days Festival in Corolla where they will demonstrate the methods that
they use to gentle and train the wild horses.
In the meantime, he will continue to train the three Corolla horses
that have joined his other wild horses at Mill Swamp Indian Horses and urge horse lovers all across the eastern seaboard to
plan for a Corolla Horse in their futures.
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