Anthropology
Related: About this forumThe return of the spirit horse to Canada
BBC Travel
By Karen Gardiner
27th January 2023
The commonly accepted story of horses in North America is that colonisers introduced them to the continent. But there was a surviving native breed of horse when the Spanish arrived.
It was a bright day in December 2021 and snow was lightly falling over Mādahòki Farm, an Indigenous visitor attraction and event space just outside Ottawa, Canada. I was at the Pibón (winter) festival, and the Anishinaabe artist Rhonda Snow stepped on a small stage that still seemed to tremble from the exuberant footsteps of just-departed pow wow dancers. Nationally renowned for her vivid Woodlands-style paintings, Snow was here to talk about her lifelong work preserving the endangered Ojibwe spirit horse; the breed, also known as the Lac La Croix Indian pony, is the only known indigenous horse breed in Canada.
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She travelled around Indigenous communities and heard many stories of Indigenous peoples' reciprocal relationship with the Ojibwe spirit horse, seeing the animals as guides and teachers. Such as the Métis fishermen who partnered with the horses each winter to haul fish off frozen lakes although the horses were never domesticated back then, they would use their hooves to create ice fishing holes in return for food and shelter from the fishermen. But, having been culled to near-extinction by European settlers who considered the wild animals a nuisance, the horses themselves were few and far between.
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In 1977, only four mares remained on an island in Lac La Croix, north-western Ontario. Having deemed the wild animals a health risk, Canadian health officials made plans to slaughter them. But, before they could do so, four Ojibwe men staged a daring rescue. They rounded up the mares, put them on a trailer and spirited them across the frozen lake and over the border to Minnesota, where they were bred with a Spanish Mustang. Careful management and selective breeding has since revived the Ojibwe spirit horse, which now numbers around 180 and is back in Canada.
https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20230126-the-return-of-the-spirit-horse-to-canada
cilla4progress
(25,956 posts)Bookmarking.
Phoenix61
(17,690 posts)Professor Emeritus Gus Cothran, who holds one of the largest horse genetics databases in the country at Texas A&M University, contends that while Ojibwe horses are a breed developed by Indigenous people in Canada, their roots are not native to Canada. They are derived from horses that Europeans brought to North America. They did not originate in North America as a distinct strain of horse, Gus says, classifying them as a mix of Spanish mustang and Canadian horses originally from France.
https://equinemonthly.com/the-horses-nobody-knows/
Wicked Blue
(6,689 posts)I'd love to read more about the DNA of these horses
Kali
(55,806 posts)wnylib
(24,506 posts)but there are differences between religion, legend, and science.
Clearly the Native people of the western Great Lakes border region treasured and cared for their horses. The horses have significant meaning for the people.
But I will believe that those horses were indigenous to North America prior to Europeans when I see DNA evidence that proves it.
Horses as we know them evolved in the wild in Eurasia several thousand years ago after their proto horse ancestors left North America and crossed into northeastern Asia. The ones that remained in North America went extinct 12,000 years ago.