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Harriett passed away this summer. We will miss her. She was a good pony.

 
Harriet
Harriet was a Bashkir Curly. According to our vet, she was between 26-28 yrs old.  She has had general care for a horse, but as far as we know or can tell, not a specialized senior care program, which is why I started her on one. She had a very sweet disposition and was great around kids. Not to mention, she was very very smart! Just like any old person, Harriet got cranky when she was tired. I loved her very much and am thankful that I got to care for her, plus she made a great pasture buddy for Ginger while we stayed at my grandparent's.


Harriet's last public appearance:

Harriet was at the Northeast Texas Children's Museum with me April 15, 2006 giving rides to community children. 

Thank you to those who gave donations for my ambassador trip this summer for the rides. 


Facts about Bashkir Curlies: 


Breed Description

American Bashkir Curly horses appear in all common horse colors including Appaloosa and Pinto. A typical Curly is of medium size, resembling the early-day Morgan in conformation. Many individuals have been found without ergots. Some have small, soft chestnuts. The wide set eyes (characteristic of Oriental horses) are said to give the breed a wider range of vision to the rear. The knees are flat. They have strong hocks short, strong backs; the rump is round without a crease; shoulders are powerful and rounded; and the chest is wide and deep. Foals arrive with thick, curly coats, curls inside their ears and curly eyelashes.

One odd feature of Curlies is that they often completely shed out the mane hair and sometimes the tail in the summer, growing it back in the winter. The hair of the mane and tail is fine and silky but often quite kinky. The summer coat is often wavy or rather straight with the curls returning in the winter coat. The American Bashkir Curly transmits the curly characteristics to offspring approximately half of the time even when mated to horses without the curly coat.

The American Bashkir Curly has a gentle nature and is easy to train. They are hardy and able to survive extreme winter conditions.

History

The American Bashkir Curly dates to 1898 when Peter Damele and his father were riding horseback in the Peter Hanson mountain range in the remote high country of central Nevada, near Austin. There they discovered three horses with tight, curly ringlets covering their entire bodies. Since then, curly horses have been found on the Damele range and many Curlies in the United States can be traced to that herd.

The Bashkir Curly gets it name from the ancient Russian breed, the Bashkir, from which the modern Curly was believed to have descended. However, the American horses may have been incorrectly named. Research done by Shan Thomas for the CS Fund and resulting in the report, Myth and Mystery: The Curly Horse in America, indicates that the Russian breed most often found with the curly coat is the Lokai breed, found in the Taijikistan region. Thomas suggests that the name Bashkir was the result of a "Strange As It Seems" cartoon published in the 1930s or 40s which identifies a "horse with a permanent wave" as a Bashkir. The Damele Family found and kept the cartoon, passing along the information to others.

The name isn't the only mystery surrounding this breed. Various theories have been proposed to explain the presence of the Curly horse in North America. Some have suggested that they came across the Bering Strait land bridge during the last ice age, but no fossil evidence has been found to support that. Others suggest that curly coated horses were imported while the Russians occupied parts of the West Coast of North America. However, Thomas' research shows there was no mention of the importation of horses into North America by Russian settlers in their ship logs. Horses were used on a limited basis during the Russian experimentation with farming during the late 1700s and early 1800s in present day Alaska. Stock breeding was not very successful with most settlements only able to keep a small number of cattle, sheep, pigs and perhaps chickens. In 1817 there were only sixteen horses in Russian America and they were more than likely the hardy Yakut and not the Bashkir or Lokai breeds. It is very unlikely that even this breed of horse could have made the treacherous journey from Alaska to Nevada.

Another theory is that a man by the name of Tom Dixon imported curly horses from northern India to Nevada around 1880. Although this theory cannot be fully proved or disproved the Curly horse was already present in America by that time. Evidence shows that Sioux Indians had Curly horses as early as 1801-02 and in his 1848 autobiography circus master, P. T. Barnum, writes of obtaining and exhibiting a curly horse.

As early as the late 1700s, sightings of curly horses were reported in South America. It seems possible, but cannot be concluded, that the Spanish conquistadors may have brough curly horses, or the curly gene, to South America, as there are several European breeds with curly hair. Another suggestion is that Norse or Celtic explorers brought curly horses to North America prior to 1492 but this theory has yet to be fully investigated. With all of these possibilities as to the origin of this unique breed no definitive answers have yet to be agreed upon.

In separate research, the CS Fund has done blood typing of 200 curly horse in the Serology Lab at UC-Davis. Although one can not definitively identify a horse's breed by it blood type characteristics there are characteristics common to an individual breed. This testing was seen as a method to determine if the Bashkir Curly did in fact display the blood characteristics of a distinct breed. The findings, however, were that the modern curly horse is not a genetically distinct breed, but has been crossed with many other breeds, particularly Quarter Horses and Morgans. The rare and unusual variants that did emerge from this testing are found only in feral horses or those breed based on feral herds. No single blood marker was found to be common in all curly horse.

Behavior

Curlies are docile and intelligent.

Function

Today, the American Bashkir Curly has excelled in many events, including barrel racing, pole bending, Western riding, gymkhana, hunter, jumper, roping, cutting, English equitation, English pleasure, Western equitation, Western pleasure, gaited pleasure and competitive and endurance trail riding.

Reference Materials

The Kentucky Horse Park or The International Museum of the Horse
4089 Iron Works Pike Lexington, Kentucky 40511
(859) 233 4303 TTD
(800) 678 8813

New Encyclopedia of the Horse (Revised)
Elwyn Hartley Edwards


Pics of Harriet:

This is the most current pic of Harriet. Scroll down to see more!

Riding Harriet--the day before her haircut! It was really starting to get hot in April so we knew we needed to get all that thick hair off of her in this Texas heat!

Harriet LOVES to go for rides!!! Even though it is most likely painful with her stiff joints, she loves to lope!

I thought it wouldn't take long to cut all her hair off....and boy wasI wrong!!! It took me three days and that was with my mom's help.There's no telling how long it would've taken me if she hadn't helped me.

Even her legs were hairy and I noticed that when I would use the metal comb not so lightly, her skin broke so easily because it is so thin since she is old. then we started being real careful so not to hurt her. She was so good and patient. Bless her heart.

It took us hours and for three whole days. We noticed that when we would pull the hair back with the metal comb, sometimes her hair would just fall out. This freaked me out at first because I really thought she was fall out. This freaked me out at first because I really thought she was spring, so do curlies. She had just not been brushed in so long I think that her hair was so matted up that she couldn't shed.

We used the metal comb to hold the matted hair clumps back away from her skin so we could cut it off without cutting her. This seemed to work best. And we had to get all the hair off before we could use the clippers on her.

This is just one clump of matted hair cut off. Multiply that times about a thousand and you might start getting close to what we cut off. In some of the pics you can see a brownish tint all over the ground around Harriet. That is all hair!!!

Even though it was very hard work, I knew it was going to be worth it! Harriet is so sweet and she deserves to have some good ol' TLC. This was nothing for how it made her feel afterwards.

Lol...well, Harriet is not THAT big at all....but she is big enough for me to hve to stand on a bucket to finish her hair cut!

Here you can see half of her with the mats cut off and the rest of matted hair...ha! Even here she looked better without all that hair.

Okay, so this totally looks gross! But the bunch of hair I am holding up is one BIG mat. Yuk!

Okay...here you can see her half shaved and with half the mats cut off already. This winter I am going to keep her brushed and make sure her skin is healthy before it grows long again so next summer it wont be such a job.

The fungus and dry skin is especially bad on her legs. I took a plastic bristle hair brush and broke up all the dry skin and washed her real good with dandruff shampoo. We'll give her one more good scrub and then a hot oil treatment and she should have a nice healthy skin hopefully.

I noticed her front pasterns have a heavy slope which can cause great strain on her feet and joints. The angle of the front hoof wall should parallel the pastern angle of the horse. In other words, the slope of the hoof wall and the pastern should be the same and Harriet's are not. When there is an destinct --like Harriet's--angle change in the pastern/foot angle, there will be extreme pressure through the foot. This is bad and uncomfortable, many times painful, to horses, but especially for senior horses since their bones and joints are usually not in that good of shape. I am going to have our farrier try to give her more heel on her hoof and less toe to maybe help the angle, but I think I might just need to wrap them to make up for the lack of support. I am going to point this out to my vet and I will keep you posted on any updates.

And here she is!!! Doesn't she look awesome! Okay...well, so she's a little skinny, but we have her on a good senior feed now and she already is looking better. She looks beautiful already...I guess because I see her as how she should look and will look...ha! Well...in the summer that is.

She felt like a million bucks that day I am sure after getting all that hair off. I will have to use the clippers again a few times during the summer to keep her hair short enough to keep her cool. But I will start letting her hair grow longer by September so by winter , she can have a good coat. Except this year she will be with me and I am going to keep her brushed and her skin healthy so next spring it wont be such an ordeal.

We still have lots of things to work on like her stiff joints and feet problems. I could use some MSM or glucosamine but I was told by another "horse person" to try flax seeds in her feed so we are trying that. We'll do that for about 6 moths to see the affects and then maybe go to something else.

We will miss Harriett. She was our friend.