Home || My-Endurance || Search || AERC || Browse || Classifieds || Events || Horses || Market || Ridecamp || Riders || The World || Advertising || Contact EnduranceNet
Endurance.Net HomeConsider This
Merri


Action Rider Tack
Treeless Saddles
Adjustable Fit
Outback Ranch Saddles
Adjustable! Specialized Saddles
Adventures at Ricochet Ridge - Riding Vacations
Business For Sale
Aeron Riding Halter & Bitless Bridle
Angel Ridge Ranch
Annie George Saddles
Training, Boarding, RV Camping in New Mexico
Arabian Saddle Company
Australian Connection
Barefoot Treeless Saddles & More from Lori's Tack
Barefoot Treeless Saddles
US Importer in NC
Belesemo Arabians
Black Forest Treeless Saddles
Bob Marshall Treeless Saddles
Boz Saddlery
Canadian Trail House Rider and Horse Gear
Carol Miller Real Estate
Cedar Ridge Ranch
Arabians & Pintabians
CIW Trailers & Stablegear Tack
Cool Medics - Cooling Products for Horse
& Rider
Cool Tack For Horse
& Rider
Crabbet Alliance of Texas
CMK Arabian Horses
CreRun Farm
Racing & Endurance Arabian Horses
Cypress Trails Equestrian Center
Sales, Training, Boarding
Deep Sands Arabians
Distance Depot Tack and Equipment
866-863-2349
Distance Horse Gear
Dixie Midnight No-Sweat Vent Pads
Duett Saddles
EasyCare
Equipedic Saddle Pads for Horses
Equithotics Sneakers for Horses!
Fire Mountain Arabians
Flight Leader Farm Horses & Vacations
Full Circle Ranch
Endurance Clinics & Horsemanship
Genuine Trekker Treeless Saddles USA
Imported from Germany
Global Endurance Training Center
Hi-Tack
Gaston Mercier Saddles
HorseWorks Sports Saddles Genie Stewart-Spears
Horses Dacor
Hought Endurance Tack
Just Chaps US
Kanavy Saddles
Kismet Arabians
Long Riders Gear
Lost Juniper Ranch
Malibu Endurance
Moss Rock Endurance & The Ghost Treeless Saddles from Italy
Oaxaca Mexico
Great Riding All Year
Endurance Horses
Owyhee Endurance Rides
Performance Animal Nutrition
Running Bear
Rushcreek Arabians
Saddling Solutions
Startrekk, Treefree & Freeform Treeless Saddles
Sharon Saare Saddles
Skito Saddle Pads
Slypner Gear Trail Supplies & Ortho-Flex Saddles
Specialized Saddles
Specialized Saddles - Eastern US
Henry Miller Amish Saddles
Sportack
SR Saddle Company
Steve Ray Gonzales
Synergist Saddles
Thinline Inc
Revolutionary Saddle Pads
Tammy's Rope Tack
Natural Rope Bridles & Halters
TieRite - Safer for your horse & trailer!
Treeless Saddles by Sensation, Ghost & Heather Moffett
Trumbull Mountain Equinox Two Endurance Saddle
TTEAM for Endurance
Clinics, Tack, Books/DVD's
Renegade Boots & More!
VETTEC Hoof Care Products
Wild Outback Ranch
For Sale
Consider This

Argentine Criollo Horse

Add Your Comments
Horseshowcentral.com - Full Article

Article by Hardy Oelke

It is difficult to imagine a horse with more endurance than the famous Argentine Criollo breed. This native horse of Argentina descends from the horses of the Iberian conquest.

When parties went to explore and conquer South America, horses were shipped to the river Plate from Iberia, and as in all the Spanish and Portuguese conquests, they brought the toughest, hardiest horses they could. Conditions were tough on such voyages with insufficient food and water. Many horses died or were unable to regain health. Whether it was the primitive characteristics that cropped out under the wild conditions in the New World, or whether some of the shipments were of rather primitive Iberian horses in the first place, fact is that until fairly recently, the Argentine Criollo and the Criollo in general, bore a considerable resemblance to the ancient Sorraia wild horse of Portugal and Spain (zebro, or encebro).

During long campaigns with Indians, many horses escaped or were turned loose. Also after destruction of Buenos Aires by Indians, many horses were driven into the wild. Natural selection resulted in physical hardiness and the survivors became the progenitors of the Argentine Criollo breed.

In Argentina summers are very hot but winters are severely cold. During seasonal migrations or drought, the wild horses were forced to travel hundreds of miles. Several explorers who ventured far out into the Pampas left records of the tremendous herds of wild horses, seen some two centuries after their ancestors had gained their freedom. The wild horses were known as Baguals, and some herds numbered into the thousands.

Many long rides of astonishing distances have been taken on Argentine Criollo horses...

More...
This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours? -->