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Urgent–Icelandic Horses Need Your Help!

Monday, November 15, 2010 @ 12:11 PM
Author: Sibella

savepony1

Dear Readers,
I received the following distressing email this weekend and was very disturbed to see this. We do not know which farm or farms sent these Icelandic horses to slaughter but it was definitely not our farm. These horses are currently located in Toppenish, near Yakima–not a far drive at all to save a life! They are scheduled to be sold to the slaughterer in less than a week, so this is absolutely urgent. Please be careful who you sell your horses to and help us rescue these wonderful animals!
Thank you,
Karen Hood
~

savepony3

You may have been reading about the herd of Icelandic ponies that were dumped at the feedlot in Toppenish over the weekend and are available for adoption this week. There were 60 originally, and there are about 40 left. The slaughter buyer from Canada is coming on Sunday Nov 21 to pick up the ones that aren’t adopted. If you are interested in saving one of these ponies’ lives or know anyone else that might be, call Sam at (509) 952-3866. Sam is trying to convince the feedlot to give her another week to find owners, so let’s hope. They are selling them for $475 for the smaller ones, and $575 for the larger ones. They looked to be mostly 12-14hh, and very stout. I’ve heard different versions of how they got there, and haven’t confirmed any yet. Sam said they are from an Icelandic breeder, and they are 2-14 years old, and should be halter broke at least. Beyond that, your guess is as good as mine. Because there were so many, and they were moving in a herd, I couldn’t really single any out to examine them, but they seemed healthy and strong as far as I could tell. As with any horse adopted from the feedlot, they would have to be quarantined for a few weeks in case of illness they might have picked up at the feedlot. If anyone adopts one and doesn’t have a place to quarantine, you can put it in my round pen with mine, as long as you provide the hay. The mares have been exposed to stallions, so some may be bred. I’ve asked Dr. Root if he would consider offering a discount for a vet check for people that have adopted these ponies, and am waiting to hear back from him. I have no idea if there are any geldings, or if they are all still stallions. I can say that not one of them acted studdy last night though.
There were lots of sorrels with flaxen mane/tail, a few grays, a gruella, a buckskin, solid blacks, and some paints. I think most of the paints were spoken for though. We adopted a white one.
These are awesome ponies, very gentle disposition, intelligent, and gaited. It would be a tragedy for them to go to slaughter, as it would be with any sound horse.
Please pass this on, and keep them in your prayers.
~

savepony2

All photos in this post are photos of the actual horses in question. They were taken with a cell phone in low light; please excuse the poor quality–they really are beautiful animals.

New Foals at Mountain Valley View Farm

Wednesday, September 1, 2010 @ 01:09 PM
Author: James G. Hood

Last night we had a new Icelandic horse foal.  This one is out of our silver dapple stallion, Aspar, and a silver dapple mare, Vindfaxa, and he is a silver dapple colt.  This is a not-so-rare color for us at Mountain Valley View Farm, but silver dapple is one of the more rare colors.  We now have 3 foals—a black colt with a star and a snip (born 5/25/10), a bay filly, very pretty (born 5/25/10), and now a silver dapple colt (born 6/5/10).

Anyone interested in Icelandic horses may call the farm line at 509-924-8112.

Horses of Fire and Ice

Wednesday, September 1, 2010 @ 01:09 PM
Author: James G. Hood

History of the Icelandic horse

Horses propably came to Scandinavia form Asia, and the horses there are the descendants of the mongolian horse. The icelandic horse is the descendant of the horses that were in Norway in the time of the vikings.

Iceland was settled between 874 AD and 935 AD. The settlers came in open boats and brought their lifestock with them. Before that, Iceland’s biggest mammal was the arctic fox. The settlers vere very often indipendent people that didn’t want to be ruled by the norwegian king, thus moving to this island without any kings. The settlers couldn’t take many animals with them when moving to Iceland, their ships weren’t big enough. So propably the chiefs only took the best of their best when bringing horses to Iceland, and when there were horses enough, import stopped. The nature molded the breed thereafter.

The settlers came from Norway, the Western Isles of Scotland, Ireland and the Isle of Man. The foundation stock for the Icelandic horse was, therefore, drawn from all of these regions. The icelandic horse has without doubt kept it’s characteristics better than any of the breeds that are it’s forefathers.

One of the most fascinationg feature of the Icelandic horse is it’s extreme genetic purity. No infusions of outside blod has propably happened to the icelandic horses for over 800 years, and there is only one breed of horses in Iceland. It is sometimes said on websites that the old Althing, the world’s oldest parliament, passed more than a millennium ago laws prohibiting the importation of foreign horses into the country. This is not true, but the truth is that there are really no documents about anybody seeing any reason to import horses in this long time.  And, 1882 import was forbidden by law, and such a law is still in effect today (to stop diseases coming to Iceland), so no horse that leaves Iceland can ever return. If a horse leaves Iceland for a competition, it can never return. Virtually all contagious diseases, from which horses on the European continent or in the USA suffer, are unknown in Iceland. The breed has also kept the gaits and the versatility of its forefathers. This law has recently been appealed by some people, but at that same time a disease came in to Iceland on a bit. The law was changed, now used bits, bridles, health products, brushes etc. are included in the list of things that cannot re-enter the island, and many other used things have to be disinfected by proper authorities.


In the early days of the Norse settlement the horse was worshipped as a deity and a symbol of fertility. A white horse was offered ceremonially at sacrificial feasts. The medieval Sagas are full of myths and heroic legends in which the horses play prominent roles. An example is Hrafnkell’s saga, where the horse Freyfaxi is the fate-maker of a prominent chief. There you can also find numerous episodes describing horse-fights between 2 stallions in a ring. Usually the owner went himself with the horse in the ring, giving it support and encouraging it.

A horse was also a symbol and protector of poetry in the ancient, nordic religion. The gods owned horses that were outstanding amongst other horses. An example is the horse Sleipnir, owned by the god Odin. It had eight legs, and was the fastest horse of all.

When heroes died their horses were often buried with them. The horses that the chiefs owned did often get special care, often being fed on expensive feed like grain, milk or butter. This is very interesting in a country where even the richest people hardly had enough to eat. A good horse became the pride and status symbol for the chief or the master of the house. The life and destiny of men got intertwined with the horse, and it was more than a working animal. It was a companion and a friend that never failed, it was called the most needed servant (not undeserved). It was also often the strongest wish of many horsemen to meet their good horse (gæðingur) on the other side of the grave.

Proper roads, that could be used for cars, were low in number in Iceland untill a few decades ago. Therefore the Icelandic was uncomparable as a pack-animal and ridinghorse. Its homing instinct has also always been extremely well developed, and a lost or loaned animal could find it’s own way home (loaned animals were often simply released and took care of returning themselves home). In the early 20. century the Icelandic horse was used for all the purposes that several different breeds might have been used for in other countries.

Horses moving loads of soil in Skagafjörður 1928 –>

They drove carts, harvesting tools, were used as pack-animals, for riding and for eating. They were the only means of travel in a rugged country. They swam over deep glacierrivers with their passengers, they carried nurses to wimen in labour, and they carried the dead in their coffins to the graveyard. Poor and children rode bareback or on a sheep-skin, and often the only bridle that was used was some rope, tied in a loop in the horse’s mouth. They were also exported to Britain to be used as pit ponies.

The most needed servant, carrying his master and the dog over a cold river. A many times recited sentence in Iceland is (translated) “between a man and a horse and a dog lies a secret bond”.

Many factors molded the icelandic horse through the ages. The most prominent are cold and wet weather, which caused the horse to grow lower legs, shorter necks, longer wintercoat, and a good digestion. Feed in the winters was little and bad, but the feed in the summertime is good, so the Icelandic horse has the capability of getting very fat in a very short time in the summer, and sure is an easy keeper. The country is also rough, with lots of lava and mountains, so the horse is sure-footed. The horse also became a late grower. If it gets well fed, it can be started when it is a few months short of being 4 years old, but if it does not get enough to eat it isn’t grown untill at 6-7 years of age. And the Icelandics aren’t generally considered ready for really hard work untill 6-7 years old. Extremeties in weather between seasons cause the hooves of horses in Iceland to be a bit more uneven than in other countries, weather is often the reason, not bad hoofcare.

An old type of icelandic horse, fat, hairy with short limbs and neck. These features still help thousands of horses that are outside in pasture all year round in Iceland.

Bad weather and volcanic eruptions are both common in Iceland, and culled those horses that weren’t tough enough. As an example we can take the bad spell of Móðuharðindi. The year 1783 there were 32,200 horses in iceland, a year later they were only 8,600. All Icelandic horses in the world (now around 200.000) are descendants of those few survivors.

Breeding has changed the average body type a bit, breeding lighter horses, but the metabolism in the horse is the same. Now horses also get fed in the wintertime, thus growing bigger and better developed than in past ages.

As knights in armour weren’t in Iceland in the middle ages, the demand for heavy trotting horses wasn’t here as it was in Europe. Icelanders wanted a smooth, fast, energetic horse, that could be used for trekking for weeks without getting sick or giving their rider a sore butt. So the tolt, pace and hardiness was never lost in this wonderful breed. It is still traditional in Iceland to cull bad horses humanely, and eat horsemeat, ensuring that mostly just the good horses are bred.

It’s also been traditional in Iceland to go on longer treks with 2-4 horses per rider, thus making it possible to ride in trot or tolt all day long. The horses that aren’t carrying a rider get a breath while one of them takes the burden at a time.

A traveller ponying two horses (this is still very common in Iceland).

Icelanders have had to trust the horse more than many other nations. There were no real roads here, and you couldn’t use carts. Maybe the icelandic horse has gotten sure-footed because men chose the horses for breeding that were outstandingly sure on bad roads, rocks, moors and steep hillsides. An unforgiving nature has chosen the strongest individuals. In many ways the culture of Icelandic horsemanship is a strange mixture of ultra-modern training techniques with very sophisticated sportmanship, and old traditions. The same rider can be one day participating in Landsmot or World Championships, and the next day sitting at home with pals, doing hestakaup.

Maybe this has caused that Icelanders are more bonded with their horses than many nations. Our literature prooves that. Men wrote poems about their horse and said great stories of it’s achievements. A proof of this are the horse-rhymes that became a special branch of literature in Iceland, and which is still cultivated.

Now there are about 80.000 horses in Iceland (but only 280.000 people, and the horse/people ratio in the country is a world record), and about 80.000 Icelandic horses in Europe. There are also over 2.000 of them on the american continent.

It is still customary over all the world to name almost all Icelandic horses with Icelandic names , regardless of in what country they are born. Sometimes this can cause a bit of trouble in pronounciation, but mostly this is a fun tradition, which honours the deep roots that this horse has in the Icelandic culture.

Article and Photos Courtesy of http://www.icelandichorse.is/history.

Icelandic Horse For Sale!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010 @ 01:09 PM
Author: James G. Hood

Fifa— (Birthday June 5, 2009) A beautiful silver dapple filly with light flaxen mane reminiscent of her grandfather and prize stallion Hugur. She stands 10 hands tall, but don’t let her small stature fool you. She is a sweet little thing with a wonderful personality like her mother, Lukka. She loves to dish out kisses, so be ready with a nice pat on the head and some oats. Her father Aspar’s excellent gaits really show through in this one year old. She has a clean tolt, excellent speed in trot, and her name, Fifa, a term for an arrow is well chosen, because with the proper training she could be something to brag about in flying pace.  Her potential in the arena is exciting, but the kids just love her personality. They love to go in the pasture and brush her mane. Stop by and see for yourself. Don’t forget an apple, that’s her favorite treat.

Please contact Karen Hood at Mountain Valley View Farm at 509-924-8112 for more information. Thank you!!

Icelandic Horse for Sale!!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010 @ 01:09 PM
Author: James G. Hood

Please contact Karen Hood at Mountain Valley View Farms for more information. The number is 509-924-8112.

Fjola- (Birthday August 16th, 2008) When  Fjola, our chocolate filly, took her first wobbly steps under the light of a full moon, we knew that a special foal had come into the world. Her energy and strength recall the best qualities of her grandfather, the prize stallion Hugur. Standing 13 hands tall, she is two years old, a warm chocolate color, and ready to be trained for competition (her tolt is very clean. Icelanders have been known to ride horses like this, once trained, with a full glass of beer or root beer as the case may be and not spill a drop), or enjoyed as a sweet horse for the whole family.  With such a gentle disposition like her mother Dimma, and smooth gaits like her silver dapple father Aspar, our daughters were in complete agreement on the name Fjola(a rare feat I’ll have you know), but a quick glance at the English translation explains why. Fjola means violet, the delicate flower, at once beautiful and strong.

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