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THE SORRAIA HORSE
The Link to Antiquity
Endangered in its Homeland and in America
Text and photography by Hardy Oelke
The ancestor of the Iberian breeds still
exists. Some of America's mustangs are a
zoological treasure and of the same type
- they represent a chance to rescue this
endangered subspecies.
To some, the wild mustangs of the American
West are just a nuisance, but to many, they
are a treasure, a living legend and symbol
of American history and of the free spirit
of the West. As such, they are protected
by the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro
Act, which was passed in Congress in 1971.
Before the "West was won" by Northern
Europeans moving in from the East, in which
process the wild mustang herds were badly
mixed up through crossbreeding, all the mustangs
were of Spanish descent. This held true for
most mustang herds well into the last century.
It was this "Spanish mustang" who
deserved, above all, the preservation granted
by the U.S. government as a symbol of American
history, not the mongrel that eventually,
towards the decline of the free range, came
to roam the West, and still does.
American Treasure
What many people don't realize is that even
today, we not only have some truly Spanish
mustangs out there, but some American mustangs
still represent much more than just feral
horses, and even more than what is vaguely
described as "Spanish mustangs"!
The indigenous Iberian wild horse was known
in Spain as marismeno, meaning "horse
of the swamp", because it was the swamps
and bottomlands of the rivers that remained
an inaccessible wilderness even when most
of the country was already settled and cultivated,
and therefore that is where the wild horses
finally had to take refuge. To this day,
the delta of the river Guadalquivir is home
of a wilderness area and wildlife refuge.
The Portuguese anatomist, horse breeder and
paleontologist Dr. Ruy d'Andrade discovered
the last survivors of this subspecies in
Portugal earlier in this century. Because
he found them in the lowlands of the river
Sorraia, that is how he named this kind of
horse. He went on to document the authenticity
of this form of horse as the main ancestor
of the Andalusian and Lusitano, and to preserve
it on his estate.
The incredible thing is, that this horse
did not only survive on the Iberian peninsula,
but among the wild horses in America as well!
Although I had always been interested in
mustangs, it was during my first visit to
the Kiger mustang herd in southeastern Oregon
when I first saw mustangs which resembled
the Sorraia to an uncanny degree. That experience
sparked an entirely new involvement, as I
knew of the Sorraia's struggle to survive.
Later, I found the same form of horse in
other mustang populations, for instance,
the Sulphur Springs horses of Utah. I immediately
conceived the idea that a separate population
of Sorraia horses in America would mean a
huge step towards a secure future for this
endangered subspecies.
What is a Sorraia?
The Sorraia horse is, in contrast to what
some authors have disseminated, not just
a breed, but it represents the indigenous
wild horse of southern Iberia that survived
in the wild until the first quarter of this
century. The whole Iberian peninsula, i.e.
Spain and Portugal, had the same indigenous,
or autochthone, horses; so "Iberian"
is a better term than "Spanish".
Some authors have called the Sorraia a pony,
which is wrong. Based on its conformation,
the Sorraia is definitely a horse. The Sorraia
horse is the most important ancestor of the
Iberian breeds such as Lusitano and Andalusian.
It is this horse that contributed the proud
carriage, the ability to flex at the poll,
to collect and to work off the hindquarters
to these breeds, and via the Lusitano and
the Andalusian to all modern warmblood breeds.
It also contributed a latent tendency for
lateral gaits and the talent for cow work.
The Portuguese scientist Dr. Ruy d'Andrade
found some of the Sorraia horses in 1920
in a remote area along the river Sorraia
in Portugal. He saved the species by placing
a small group on his estate and letting them
multiply. Although he did make some selective
decisions along the way, he tried to let
mother nature be the decisive factor, concluding
that this horse had evolved in this environment
and that those embodying the subspecies best
would survive. Dr. d'Andrade's extensive
studies documented the Sorraia horse as a
direct descendant of one of the four forms
of primeval wild horses from which all our
domestic breeds derived, namely form III,
which inhabited the south of the Iberian
peninsula. That the Sorraia represents the
indigenous South Iberian horse was and is
acknowledged by other prehistorians of the
horse, for instance Speed (Scotland), Etherington
(Scotland), Ebhardt (Germany), Skorkowski
(Poland), Zeeb (Germany) and Schaefer (Germany).
Paintings of horses on the cave walls at
La Pileta, Spain, officially dated between
30,000 and 20,000 B.C., already show the
subconvex heads and arched necks typical
of Andalusians, Lusitanos and their ancestor,
the Sorraia, as do ancient sculptures. The
Sorraia is the horse that exemplifies the
term "Spanish", or "Iberian",
and there is no other horse as purely Iberian
as the Sorraia. However, man-made Iberian
breeds have in their veins, besides some
non-Iberian blood, that of another kind of
horse also indigenous to the Iberian peninsula:
the Garrano, a pony inhabiting the mountainous
regions in the north.
To quote Dr. d'Andrade, "The Sorraia
horse differs clearly from the Garranos,
the wild ponies of the mountains in the north.
It shows many similarities to the higher-bred
Andalusian. The Garranos are found in mountainous
regions which receive much precipitation,
where the pastures stay green all year and
where the burro is not found. They are small,
averaging 12.2 hands, brown in color, with
a straight or concave profile and their teeth
show Celtic characteristics.
"Let us now turn towards the second
group, the Sorraias. They too are of rather
small stature, average 14 to 14.1 hands,
but are not as small as the Garrano ponies
and still represent horses in the true meaning".
Dr. d'Andrade found conclusive evidence in
the teeth of the Sorraia horses: "As
is well known, teeth are among the most common
archaeological findings. They allow precise
conclusions regarding the evolutionary state
of an animal and are the most reliable elements
for a systematization.The Sorraia horse's
teeth differ considerably from those of the
Garrano pony and it therefore must belong
to a different species of Equus caballus
caballus. The pure-bred Andalusian's teeth,
though, correspond with those of the Sorraia
horse." The Garrano has had a certain
influence on all Iberian breeds and their
New World derivatives, which is evident in
the Lusitano, particularly in the Alter Real
strain, Andalusian and more so in the Paso
breeds and the Galiceno. In regard to the
"Spanish Colonial Horse", it is
known that it also carried a certain amount
of other non-Iberian blood, i.e. form II
blood (Draft) and possibly form IV blood
(Arabian).
The four forms of primeval wild horses from
which all our domestic horses descend are:
Two Northern forms: Form I, the pony, best
represented by the Exmoor pony. This form
is of brown color, has a mealy mouth and
lighter coloring in the belly and flank areas.
Form II, the ancestor of the draft horses.
Two Southern forms: Form III, ancestor of
the Andalusian, Lusitano and Warmbloods,
best represented by the Sorraia, other related
horses such as the Akhal Tekke and the old-time
Barb. Form IV, the ancestor of the Arabian,
the original Caspian horse being the direct
descendant.
What does the Sorraia look like?
A description of the Sorraia would be identical
to that of the primeval form III horse: It
is Roman-headed, which must not be confused
with Roman-nosed. A flat forehead and a Roman
nose would be a draft horse characteristic.
The form III profile is subconvex, sometimes
convex, all the way from poll to muzzle.
The head is also typically fairly narrow
from a front view, rather narrow between
the eyes and even from a side view it tends
to be not very deep. The throat latch is
clean, affording a natural capacity to arch
the neck. The chest is narrow, but deep.
Due to prominent withers higher than the
croup this is an "uphill horse".
The back is of medium length. The hip is
typically of good length and sloping, but
not steeply dropping, and the tailset is
not particularly low. Clean, fairly long
legs with longer, round cannon bones are
typical, and they have no excessive hair
around the fetlocks and medium-sized feet.
The size is around 14 hands, although some
horses mature higher when properly cared
for. Many Sorraias are kept semi-wild and
have to fend for themselves without getting
supplemented.
Sorraias are always of dun or grullo color.
Iberian and other European experts are in
agreement that this dun or grullo color is
the original color of the Iberian horse.
The Greek author Strabon (63 B.C. - 20 A.D.)
described the Iberian horses as "duns
with indistinct striping". St. Isidor
of Sevilla described the color of the Iberian
horses as "dosinus"= donkey-colored
or grullo. "Dun" may be an insufficient
description, as horses come in different
types of dun coloration. A good example would
be the Norwegian Fjord horse, whose dun color
usually is different, even though it was
received most likely from some ancestors
of Iberian descent. The dun color was selected
for by Norwegian breeders, but due to the
dominating influence of the northern forms
, it has the form I color pattern superimposed,
resulting in duns with mealy mouths and often
lighter belly and flank areas.
Przewalski's horse is another example for
a different kind of dun: it usually has a
more reddish dun color, again with a mealy
mouth and light, sometimes almost white,
belly, flanks, and upper inside legs. Zebra
leg stripes are not typical for Przewalski's
horse, which is, by the way, a different
subspecies, as it has a different chromosome
count than all other horses. Belonging to
the Sorraia-type dun (and grullo) color are
a "sooty" face, i.e. dark bridge
of nose and muzzle area, dark lower legs
with zebra striping and a dorsal stripe.
Many have a shoulder cross, sometimes a double
shoulder cross. Typical stripes on neck,
back (sawtooth markings) and rump seem to
be a trait in progress of disappearing, something
that some experts blame on the heavy inbreeding
of today's Sorraias. Foals are often born
with zebra stripes all over the neck, back
and rump, which will usually disappear as
the horse matures. Sometimes a certain amount
of these stripes still remain even in mature
horses. The ears are fawn-colored inside,
black-rimmed and have a dark upper portion
on their backside. The head may show "cobwebbing"
on the forehead. Mane and tail are bi-colored,
i.e. the black hair is flanked on both sides
by light-colored, often almost white, hair.
Another characteristic is the barring on
the neck, sometimes extending from the underside
of the neck or chest. This is not caused
by a darker color, but rather by a different
grain of the hair coat, and is more or less
visible depending on how the light is reflected
and how long the hair is. Wherever I found
horses of this form, I also found this characteristic
expressed at least to some degree - in horses
from Portugal, from Oregon, Utah, Wyoming
or Nevada.
A Chance for Preservation
Experts agree that the Sorraia shows no evidence
of outside blood and modern Sorraias may
look the same as they did thousands of years
ago. The Portuguese zoologist Dr. d'Andrade
did not create a breed when preserving the
Sorraia horses, but he gave the last remaining
individuals a sanctuary on his ranch. He
kept them in a semi-wild state, and rather
than selectively breeding them, allowed mother
nature to be the determining factor by not
feeding or supplementing these horses. As
d'Andrade did not get any outcrops of other
forms from his original seed stock, it can
rightfully be assumed that they were of the
true kind.
Today, Sorraias are bred by a handful of
private breeders. Most are still owned by
the d'Andrade family, with José Luis Sommer
d'Andrade, grandson of Dr. Ruy d'Andrade
and president of the Sorraia association,
managing the family estate. His siblings
own some and a few more are in other private
hands outside the d'Andrade family. The Portuguese
state breeding farm also has a small herd
of these horses and several more are owned
privately in Germany, France and Switzerland.
The total number may not exceed 150 head,
and they all stem from the original group
of 7 mares and 4 stallions - that is how
imminent the threat of inbreeding is!
The good news is that there are horses among
the mustangs of the American West which resemble
the Sorraia, or indigenous Iberian horse,
to a T! They offer a chance to revitalize
the species and put it on a healthy footing
world-wide. "I gladly confirm that these
mustangs should be preserved and support
your endeavor wholeheartedly", wrote
Jose Luis d'Andrade, president of the Sorraia
breed association in Portugal. Professor
Dr. Klaus Zeeb, Germany, wrote: "Due
to their history, I would have expected the
American mustangs to be related to this type
of horse (Sorraia). However, if even today
one can find individuals identical to the
Sorraia among American mustangs, I consider
it highly desirable, from a zoological and
ethological point of view, that measures
be taken for the conservation of these horses".
Learn more about the Sorraia horse and Sorraia
Mustang from Hardy Oelke's excellent book
"Born Survivors on the Eve of Extinction",
available from the Conquistador Bookstore.
To check out the book, just click here: Survivors
The Sorraia Mustang Studbook
The Sorraia Mustang Studbook (SMS) was established
to collect, record and preserve data of mustangs
of the Sorraia type in the interest of genetic
conservancy and to ensure a continued existence
of this subspecies. Mustangs are registered
with SMS according to type only, irrespective
of state of origin or mustang registry previously
registered in. The SMS is not rivaling any
existing mustang registry, and any SMS registered
horse may be registered with any of the other
registries, if eligible. At this point, free
registration is available and consists of
data-recording only with no papers being
issued. Issuing of registration certificates
is optional at $25.00 per horse. If you are
a Mustang owner and feel your horse(s) may
qualify, please write to the Sorraia Mustang
Studbook and send in the following: Five
color photographs (2 direct side views, one
from each side, 1 front view, 1 head shot
directly from one side and one showing dorsal
stripe), BLM number or the number of another
mustang registry (if the horse does not have
a BLM number), sex, birth date, height, and
in case of a BLM horse, herd management area
or state of origin, name and address of owner.
Send your application to: Sorraia Mustang
Studbook, P. O. Box 3, Dale, Oregon 97880.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Hardy Oelke has been involved with horses
for the last 30 years and has been pioneering
the western style of riding in Europe. Besides
his writing career, he has been training
horses for the public since 1975 and is one
of the most respected expert on western horses
and riding in Europe. He has held clinics
in Sweden, Denmark, The Netherlands, Austria,
Oregon and his native Germany. As an author,
Hardy Oelke published the first book ever
in German on the subject of western training.
He has written countless articles for German
magazines and has also contributed to American
publications such as The Paint Horse Journal.
About a dozen of his books on riding, training
and horse breeds have been published. "The
Paint Horse, an American Treasure" is
also available in the United States. Oelke
has always had a profound interest in the
world's primitive horses. He has traveled
North America extensively since 1975 in order
to study its horses and horse culture. He
was not prepared to find among the wild herds
horses that resembled the Sorraia, which
he knew as a sub-species desperately struggling
to survive in its native southern Iberia.
To his amazement and dismay, these horses
were not recognized for what they were, and
treated like so many common feral horses.
His efforts have since gained support for
the preservation of the "Sorraia Mustangs"
from Portuguese and Spanish breeders and
experts and German zoologists.
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