The Kiger Mustang
No other horse in the world today is quite like the Kiger Mustang.
To truly appreciate
this special breed one must understand the unique relationship that
grew between man and
this remarkable horse, and the historical path they rode together.
We invite you to read
on as we take you on a journey through history.
The Spanish Horse reigned for several centuries throughout the world
as the embodiment
of perfection in horseflesh. But with the advent of the motor-car
many believe that the
true Spanish Horse has been cross-bred and abandoned nearly to
the point of extinction.
The Kiger Mustang is thought to be one of the most pure herds of Spanish
Horses in the
world today.
While many historians claim that domestication of the horse first took
place around 5000
B.C., Evidence has been found that strongly suggests the
domestication of the Iberian
Horse as early as 25,000 B.C. Cave paintings have been
discovered in the mountains of
Northwestern Spain portraying Mesolithic horses being led by men and
women with what
appear to be rope halters on their heads. The horses depicted
bear an undeniable likeness
to the Kiger Mustangs of today, with the so-called “Barb” head clearly
evident. At first
these horses were probably kept as meat or for beasts of burden. The
horses that did not
show a propensity toward man, became dinner. It is clear that the cave
dwellers hunted the
early horse for food, but some obviously were captured and domesticated.
Without
realizing it, early man was selectively breeding horses that had a
partiality and fondness for
man.
The horse continued to live and strive on the Iberian Peninsula. By
the Golden eras of
Greece and Rome the Iberian Peninsula became known throughout the Mediterranean
as
the land of Equus. It was there, according to traditional Greek
fables, that Zephyr the
Greek God of the wind bred the Iberian horses and produced Pegasus,
the famed winged
horse of Mount Olympus. Greek armies and the famous Legions of
Rome mounted on
Iberian Stallions conquered the ancient world of their day.
Southern Iberia became the
Roman province of Betica and the Iberian charger was Betica’s main
export. The Iberian
horse became known worldwide for their fire, agility and were a perfect
example of
controlled power.
Over the next thousand years we do not know what infusions or strains
of imported horses
impacted the development of the Iberian horse. Greeks, Roman
Goths, and Moors all
occupied the Iberian peninsula at one time or another, and without
a doubt these cultures
impacted the development of the Iberian horse. The Arab invasion
in 711 A.D. was the
frosting on the cake in the recipe that produced Europe’s greatest
horse breed. The
Iberian charger was no match for the fast Berber horses who literally
ran circles around
them. The Berber warrior’s horses brought refinement and refreshment
to the heavier
breed. Over the next centuries in the southern provinces of the Iberian
Peninsula the
melding of the Iberian charger and the Berber horse produced the perfect
combination of
desirable characteristics in agility, strength, and beauty and, in
addition, possessed great
docility, an obedient nature, and strong loyalty to man.
From this time forward there would never be a war-horse to equal them.
Every army
desired the Iberian Charger. Besides agility and strength, this
horse has always had a regal
carriage and high step fit for any king. There was hardly a breed
in ancient times, which
did not feel the dynamic impact of the Iberian’s blood.
It was in the hands of the bullfighters of Spain that the Iberian steed
earned its reputation
as the greatest stock-working animal in the equine world. Spanish
vaqueros used their
Iberian horses to handle temperamental bulls. With incredible
speed and handiness they
maneuvered the angry bulls, dodging in and out, barely missing the
hooking horns. The
famous American Quarter Horse and other breeds noted for their “cow
sense” inherited
this ability from their Iberian ancestors.
By Columbus’s second voyage, the early 1500’s, Spanish Explorers began
to bring Iberian
horses to the New World. These horses were instrumental in the
conquest of Native
American civilizations like the Aztec and the Inca. The
principal kind of horses imported
to the New World, were at first, the North African Barb, the indigenous
Iberian horse or
Sorria, and various mixtures of the Andulusain and the two breeds.
A few Andulusian
stallions were brought over, however, the early Spanish Explorers were
not prepared to
risk valuable Andulusian stock to a perilous sea voyage and unknown
dangers, aware that
their return was beyond consideration and their survival in doubt.
By the late 1500’s and into the 1700’s Royal breeding Farms were established
in the Indies
and Mexico. Adulusians of the highest order were provided to
them. Consignment after
consignment arrived. The Adulusian was crossed and recrossed
on the stock brought over
on previous voyages. Eventually the horse population from
these bases spread with the
onward march of the conquistadors, the priests and the settlers that
followed them.
Long before the Castillain, Cortes crossed lances with the people of
the Aztec civilization,
a trail etched deep through centuries of use linked the Blue Mountains
of Oregon with the
Aztec capital of Central Mexico. The indigenous people at both
ends and in the middle of
the trail shared a common ancestry and a common language.
Trade goods passed back
and forth along what would later be known as the Shoshoni Trail.
The Aztec in the south
and the Hopi in the Colorado basin obtained gold, obsidian, silver,
pine nuts and otter
skins from the north. The Shoshoni received turquoise, corn,
tobacco and parrot feathers
from the south. This trade route extended from Vera Cruz north
along the coast to the
Rio Grande River. From there it continued north to Santa Fe,
angled across western
Colorado through Hopi country, thence into Utah where it crossed the
White River; then
on to the Green River crossing the Uinta Mountains to the Snake River
and then west
where it followed the Malheur River into Harney Basin in outheastern
Oregon. Again it
turned north to the headwaters of the Crooked River and crossed Big
Summit Prairie into
the John Day Valley. At Picture Gorge on the John Day River the
Shoshoni Trail from
Mexico joined the trade routes of the Columbia River to the coast of
the Pacific
Northwest.
The Spanish horse supplied the power for Hernado Cortez to destroy
the Aztecs, the most
advanced civilization on the North American continent, and a few years
later the Spaniard
and the Spanish horse would provide the Aztec’s cousins the Shoshoni
the means to not
only survive but to emerge as the leading and most powerful and feared
tribe in western
North America.
In 1541, the Shoshoni watched and marveled as Coronado fought his way
up the
Colorado River, retreated to the Red River and the plunged north towards
the Cimarron.
However, it was not the Spaniards who inspired them with awe.
They were men, no
different and no worse than other men. What held the weary Shoshoni
spellbound were
the soldiers gliding across the sage, riding on the backs of large
animals. Grass fires
flashed the word ahead. Strange men on large dogs, as dogs were
the Shoshoni’s only
beasts of burden, were prowling the southern wastelands. Before
the Shoshoni stood the
means to a new wealth, a means for greatness.
After months of observation, the Shoshoni were convinced that if the
clumsy aliens could
ride such a creature, so could they. It was relatively easy to
catch one, Coronado left
horses strung out for 900 miles in his epic crossing of the southwest
plains. Within a very
short span of time the Shoshoni became accomplished horsemen.
Small mobile units of
Shoshoni mounted on fast horses covered 800 miles in a single trip.
This was no more
than a pleasant outing for a people who had walked every inch of ground
between the
Cascade Range and the Coast of Mexico. With the added strength
and speed of the horse
the Shoshoni was able to trade over vast distances, hunt large game
and maintain much
larger family units or villages. Soon they also held a decisive
military advantage over
neighboring tribes. The Spanish horse then became the primary
trade item of the
Shoshoni.
The Spanish crown established missions over northern Mexico, Texas
and the American
Southwest. The Spanish missionaries contributed their share
of horses to the wild herds
and the Shoshoni. There where no fences and the mission herds
wandered over vast tracts
of land claimed by the missions. It was an easy job to gather
a hundred mission horses and
head them north to Oregon country. In addition the Jesuit Priests
often gave horses to the
Indians when they were attempting to convert them to Catholicism.
After the destruction of the Aztecs, the Hopi were the next members
of the Shoshoni
family to feel the bitter sting of Spanish dominance. The Hopi
endured Spanish rule for
seventy-five years until 1675 when a plea for help reached the war
camps of the northern
Shoshoni. The thousands of Spanish horses at Santa Fe were all
the plunder necessary to
lure a large war party of northern Shoshoni to come to Hopi country
and drive out the
Spanish. In late July of 1680 five hundred Shoshoni arrived after
a twenty-nine day march
at the nearly deserted Hopi Pueblo of Kisa’ kobi. On August 10,
1680 the Spanish would
reap a bumper crop of the seeds of cruelty they had sown. One
fifth of the 2500 Spanish
settlers where wiped out. The remainder fled south along the
Shoshoni Trail, now called
Deadman’s Road, leaving behind all of their possessions. They
fled They did not stop
until they reached the safety of El Paso del Norte.
After the defeat of the Spanish at Santa Fe the Shoshoni, their appetite
now whetted for
horses and blood, moved south into the Texas Panhandle. From
camps along the
Canadian and Red Rivers, the Shoshoni raided Spanish settlements for
horses and
whatever they had to offer. War parties sometimes thrust hundreds
of miles into Mexico,
returning with as many as 1000 stolen horses. Most of the horses
and goods were
funneled north into Oyer’ungun as the Shoshoni called the Blue Mountains
of Oregon.
They found horses so plentiful in Mexico that this band of Shoshoni
raiders decided to
take up permanent residence to serve as a supply depot for the northern
Shoshoni. These
Shoshoni became the fourth segment to break away form the mother nation.
They called
themselves Kansas, the Europeans called them Comanches.
The introduction of the Spanish horse by the Shoshoni to the western
tribes changed the
way of life of many Indians tribes. So radically did their culture
change, that tribal
existence only a few hundred years prior the acquisition of the horse
became to many
tribal cultures a forgotten way of life. For the plains Indians
to gallop 100 miles in a day
was not uncommon. The horse became a measurement of wealth, the
war pony a symbol
of great pride.
The Spanish horse is a hot-blooded, Old World horse, the culmination
of centuries of
superior breeding, honed to perfection in Spain as the world’s finest
war, stock and
pleasure horse. When transplanted to American soil the Iberian
horse never lost its cutting
edge. It’s agility, intelligence, courage and endurance only
sharpened as its metal was
tested in the wild interior of the continent. Never grained or
sheltered, the Iberian horse
endured and thrived under the harshest of conditions.
By the mid 1800’s the American west began to be forged and molded by
the cattle
rancher. The Spanish Mustang was used to gather millions of wild
longhorns off the
Texas range. These mustangs were ridden by a breed of men as
wild as the longhorn and
as tough as the Mustangs they rode. The Spanish Mustang swam
every river from Texas
to Canada, enduring stampedes, tornadoes, hailstorms and freezing blizzards.
They did it
all while foraging on bunch grass and bitter brush without grain.
They came through it
with their eyes alert and heads up.
The once pure Spanish herds received continual contamination and mixture
with other
breeds as settlements and ranches were established across the American
West. Sometimes
wild stallions tore down fences and made off with tame mares, other
times tame mares
went through the fences on their own. Work horse teams were lost
all across the country
from farms and wagon trains. Horses from French Canada were introduced
throughout
the Mississippi valley as French explorers and settlers descended the
valley as far south as
New Orleans. The U.S. Cavalry also added to the mix. They felt
the need for a larger
horse so began a systematic program of shooting the Spanish Mustang
stallions and
turning lose English Thoroughbreds into the herds on the American Plains.
By the late
1800’s the use of the horse by the U.S. Army became directed more to
the pulling artillery
or heavy wagons. So the U.S. government purchased Friesian stallions
from Germany and
released them into the vast herds of American Mustangs. This practice
continued well into
the early 1900’s. By this time the pure Spanish Mustang
was all but extinct.
Once, the large herds of wild horses posed no particular threat to
human interest, just the
opposite they were the transportation. But eventually this all
changed. Ranchers began to
resent the horses which ate grass needed for their cattle. Many
ranchers adopted a policy
of shooting any wild horses they could. By the later part of the 19th
century, most
purebred Spanish American horses had been reduced to near extinction
by crossbreeding
and extermination by ranchers who viewed them as compition for much
coveted grass for
domestic livestock. There were an estimated two million wild
horses in the United States
at the end of the 1800’s. By 1935 that number had been reduced
to an estimated 150,000.
Mustangers began to use various, often cruel, methods to capture the
remaining horses for
sale to the meat packing industry for the production of pet food.
By 1971 it was
estimated that fewer than 30,000 horses remained of the once vast herds
of the American
West.
The American Mustang herds of the 1930’s were vastly different from
the pure Iberian
horse introduced by Columbus, the horses that served the early Spanish
explorers, the
American Plains Indian and the Cowboy for four hundred years.
Most horse enthusiasts
thought the vast herds of pure Spanish Mustangs had become extinct.
Imagine the delight
of the BLM wildhorse specialists when in 1977 in a remote area
of South Eastern Oregon
they noticed a group of twenty-seven horses that carried the color,
confirmation and
primitive markings of the Spanish Mustang. All the horses in the herd
were some shade of
Dun ranging from buckskin to claybank and Grullo. All had the dorsal
stripes and zebra
stripping on their legs and the classic barb head. For four hundred
years these horses had
apparently inhabited the remote and rugged desert of southeastern Oregon
undetected and
unchanged. They had been culled by nature, the most critical
judge of all, fired in the
crucible of war and molded by the necessity of survival. The BLM immediately
began to
take steps toprotect this national treasure. This herd of twenty-seven
horses were
gathered and held in the Burns district facility until a suitable area
was found to release
them. To prevent losing all the horses to a natural catastrophe,
two Herd Management
Areas were established in a remote area of southeastern Oregon.
Twenty were let loose in
the Kiger Herd Management area and the remaining seven were released
in the Riddle
Mountain HMA. Today, the BLM protects and manages these unique
horses (The Kiger
Mustang) to maintain a pure gene pool.
Since the discovery of these special horses, blood tests done at the
University of Kentucky
have found genetic markers intact and clearly tying the Kiger to the
Spanish horses ridden
by early Spanish Explorers (the Andalusian, Sorraia). The Kiger
is very intelligent, and
learns extremely fast. It is noted for its stamina and toughness.
The Kiger matures slowly
and has a long and useful life-span. Broodmares continue to produce
well into their mid
and late twenties. They are easy keepers, thriving on grass alone
even under working
conditions. The disposition of the Kiger displays a unique combination
of hot blooded
Spanish temperament combined with a gentle, calm willingness to please.
Stallions are
well mannered and easily managed.
For two thousand years equestrians have considered the horses of the
Iberian Peninsula
the ideal horse. The Greeks used the Iberian horse as a model
for Pegasus; the Romans
ruled the known world from the back of Iberian stallions. Spain conquered
the vast
empires of the New World riding the world’s greatest war-horse.
Bred to handle the agile
bulls of Spain, they were a tailor-made buffalo horse and war pony
for the American
Indian, and for the American cowboy more than a match for the wiley
longhorn. Centuries
ago, the conquistadors sailed to the New World with horses. Since this
rugged steed set
foot on the rocky soil of America, it has remained a legend so intertwined
with the
conquest of a nation that it has become history in the flesh.
For today’s equestrian or horse lover who is looking for stunning equine
beauty, the most
noble of companions, a mount combining spirit with gentleness; and
for the sportsperson
who wants a partner who is a fast learner with supreme athletic ability,
there is no better
choice than the Kiger Mustang, the embodiment of an American Legend.