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How Do You Brush A Curly Horse? History and Facts about the American Curly Horse Breed

The Curly horse (also called the Bashkir Curly, North American Curly Horse, and American Bashkir Horse) comes in all colors, sizes, and body type – but is well known for its calm, intelligent, friendly personality, and their unique coat of curly hair. 

The gene that gives the Curly horse its distinctive hair is most obvious in their winter coat. The gene can be expressed minimally, with curly hair just inside the ears, at fetlocks, and a wavy mane and tail. It can also be expressed maximally and in “extreme” ways. The maximal expression has curls all over the horse’s body, a “dreadlocked” mane, and curly eyelashes. The extreme expression shows tight curls all over the horse’s body, but this coat usually sheds out to almost bald in the summer. Summer coats on a curly horse show a slight wave. 

The gene that gives the coat its curls is a heterozygous one, which means that some purebred Curlies show no curl at all. These are called “smooth coat” Curlies. 

Caring for the curly hair is fairly simple. Most owners choose not to comb the mane to keep the coats from losing their curl. Manes are trimmed often to keep them from matting. Tails can be combed as normal. Many people collect the shedded hair from the mane and tails in Spring and donate it to the ICHO Fiber Guild to use the hair for spinning. 

It is claimed that the Curly horse is the only hypoallergenic horse breed, as most people with horse allergies can handle them without an issues. A study was conducted that indicated a protein is missing from the hair of the Curly Horse that may be what causes allergic reactions, but the study was never published. Members of the Curly Horse community are trying to fund more research on this topic. 

Research into the origin of the Curly horse is highly debated and is still being researched. Disagreements of the origin of the breed have resulted in confusion of what the breed is and what it should be called. Some organizations in the community want the word “Bashkir” removed from versions of the name because a 1990 study indicated that it is unlikely that the Bashkir horse – which also has a curly coat – is an ancestor. One theory is that the origins of the breed are Iberian. 

The Curly horse was first recorded in Eureka, Nevada in the early 20th century by a rancher named John Damele and his sons. Mustangs were a common sight in the area, but horses with a curly coat of hair were not! Years later, the Dameles managed to catch one of the curly-coated horses, break it to ride, and sell it. In 1932 an unusually cold and harsh winter hit the area and by spring the only horses that could be found were the Curlies. This was evidence of the Curly horses’ hardiness, and the Damele family noted it and decided they should include more of these horses in their herd. After another harsh winter in 1951-1952, the family got serious about breeding the Curly horse. They found a foundation stallion in one of the Mustang herds – a two-year-old chestnut they named “Copper D”. The family didn’t care much about keeping the horses “pure” and added more blood to the herd, introducing a Morgan and an Arabian stallion among other breeds. Out of this one herd came the hundreds of pedigree Curly horses that are registered today.

Curlies are eye-catching and unusual in the show ring, and have the movement, endurance, and spirit for competition. They have been shown in the upper levels of some of the most elite equestrian events, including dressage and showjumping. Curlies are quiet, level-headed horses that don’t spook easily, making them excellent first horses for beginner riders. Riders with horse allergies have ridden Curlies from the beginning stages to the more advanced of competitions. The breed has also been used for driving, western events, ranch horses, trail horses, and companions. Curlies have been crossbred with some gaited breeds, resulting in about 10% of offspring that will do an ambling gait called the “Curly Shuffle”. The breed is not used for horse racing or high-trotting showing.

Do you love the Curly horse? Click the above image to purchase a print!

I am fascinated with the Curly horse! I think their curls make them absolutely adorable and unique, and felt that they deserved a place among the “Horses of the World” series. It was difficult to come up with a way to show the fur texture on the chest of my drawing, but I’m very happy with the outcome of the mane! The Curly was drawn with ink and colored pencil on a map page.

Have you ever seen a Curly horse? Do you know someone who loves the Curly breed? Use the buttons below to share this post with them!

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5 Facts about the Heihe Horse Breed

1. The Heihe Horse comes from the boundary between China and Russia.

This area is the Heilongjiang River Basin in Heihe City. The average temperature in this area is near 32F, with the lowest temperatures around -58F and the highest in summer at around 89F. The terrain of this area is hilly, with forest and tundra to the north. 

2. The breed comes from a mix of Mongolian and local stock.

Mongolian horses were brought to Heihe city on several occasions, introducing that stock to the local animals. In 1930, larger Russian animals were also introduced to the breed. It was late in the 1930’s where a stud farm was organized for the Heihe. This stud farm used a Russian strain of the Mongolian horse along with Anglo-Norman animals. Breeding practices were strict until 1955.

3. The Heihe breed can survive extreme temperatures.

Because of their adaptation to the cold, this breed can stay out overnight in -40F temperatures and not suffer any ill-effects.

Do you love the Heihe horse breed? Click the image to buy a Heihe print!

4. The Heihe horse is essential to life in the Heilongjiang River Basin.

Heihe horses are used for both agriculture and transportation in their area of origin. They are powerful horses with high endurance, perfect for pulling heavy loads. They are used for plowing and farm work. 

5. Heihe horses come in two types.

There is a lighter riding-draft type of Heihe and a more robust draft-riding type. Both types of Heihe are powerful and have high endurance. Heihe horses come in chestnut, gray, bay, and black colors and are willing and obedient.

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My Favorite Color

I thought it would be fun to share my favorite colors today! I love colors, but my favorites are green and blue. I use blue for Glory’s tack and my riding clothes, but I also LOVE green.

Click the photo below to go to the Instagram post with that photo! What’s your favorite color? Let me know in the comments!

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Why I Changed Styles and Subject Matter

Sometimes, an artist just must change styles or subject matters. It happens to all of us at some point, I think. An artist changes styles because they improve their technical skills, do life studies, or find a new medium that they like, among other reasons.

People who have been following my art for a while may know that at the beginning of 2018, I started shifting my artistic focus away from comics and cartoons and over to animal art. For almost a year I tried to do both cartoons and animal art, but as time went on I slowly started doing more and more animal art. Now I almost exclusively draw animal art!

I wanted to take this post to talk about how that shift came about because I don’t think I’ve addressed that in detail. I still love comics and cartoons, and storytelling, but I’ve found animal art to be very fulfilling over the past couple of years, especially my Horses of the World series.

My Comics Booth, 2015 Ohayocon

I spent my creative time from 2010 until 2017 working primarily on a comic called Adrastus. Though I still love the story and still want to rework it as a novel, I found that creating it like a comic was just not working out for me. I had trouble gaining any traction with the comic, and working on it became harder and harder, especially when I was working two barn jobs to make ends meet and also trying to update a comic three times a week. It became impossible to continue the comic while also working, and I couldn’t create enough money through the comic to drop one of my jobs.

I got to the point where I actually met with a business advisor in January of 2018 because I was so desperate to get an outside, unbiased look at what I was trying to do. By this time I had done around 6 of my Horses of the World pieces, so I brought these and my comic art to the meeting. After having a chat with the advisor, I had a plan to get my name out in my local area by promoting my horse art.

Over time I began to realize that drawing horses and other animals is extremely rewarding for me. I wrote recently about My Mission as an Artist and how I hope that my art will encourage learning and conservation. It is so much easier to talk to people and connect over my animal art than it is to try and explain my cartooning and comics. I love to see people’s faces light up when they see my art at the co-op store that I’m a part of, out at a fair, or when I’ve been commissioned to do a portrait of their special pet. I find telling people about all the different breeds of horses I’ve drawn to be extremely rewarding, especially when I can tell them something cool about a breed they’ve never heard of, or something new about their favorite breed. Though I made many connections over the years of working on my comic story, and I cherish the friends that I made during that time to this day, there is just something more rewarding to me about the path that my career has gone down in the past two years. Perhaps it’s because of my life-long love of horses and now having them in my life because of finding Glory, but regardless I am so happy with the way that my artist career has shaped up lately and I hope to do more amazing things and keep growing into 2020.

2019 Outdoor Fair Booth

To close out, a huge thanks to those who are still with me despite my subject matter/style change! I was worried when I started shifting focus that everyone I knew from comics would disappear out of my life, but I am very glad that hasn’t happened.

If you’re an artist, have you ever drastically changed styles or subject matters? How did that go for you? Leave a comment!

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My Favorite Horse Movie – Wild Hearts Can’t Be Broken Review and Synopsis

I was the girl who read every horse book in the local library and rented every horse movie at the local video store. I didn’t have real horses in my life, so books and movies had to do for my horse fix. Today, I want to share my favorite horse-related movie with all of you!

“Wild Hearts Can’t Be Broken” is a movie I loved as a child and still love to this day. I had this movie on a VHS tape as a kid and I nearly wore the tape out watching it over and over again. A few years ago my best friend bought me the movie on DVD for my birthday and I got to watch it again for the first time in years.

This is a “based on a true story” live-action Disney move that was released on May 24, 1991. I don’t remember ever seeing this movie in a theater, so I probably found it in the video rental store months later and rented it, and then a copy was made and that was the tape I had.

The movie is set during the Great Depression and stars Gabrielle Anwar as the main character, Sonora Webster. Sonora and her little sister live on their aunt’s farm, and that is where the movie opens up. Sonora is supposed to be getting ready for school, but she is looking at a magazine ad for Atlantic City that features an illustration of a stylish lady with short hair. Sonora cuts her hair short like the illustration, and her aunt makes her wear a bag over her head when she leaves the house to hide her new haircut.

Sonora and Lightning the Draft horse

While she’s on the way to school, a group of bully kids see her with the farm’s horse and start goading her into trying to jump the fence on Lightning. Sonora tears off part of her dress to use as reins and tries to jump the fence on the big draft horse, but she ends up breaking the fence and letting the cows out. This makes her late for school, getting her into more trouble. By the time Sonora gets home from school, her aunt is selling Lightning to two men who are taking the horse down the road. Sonora gets upset about the loss of the horse she loves, and later her aunt informs her that she is going to send Sonora to live in a state home, but Sonora’s little sister will continue living on the farm.

Sonora runs away that night and sets off to find a job and to get to Atlantic City “Where all your dreams come true”. She comes across a carnival and seeks out Doctor Carver because of a job posting she sees, looking for diving girls. Sonora ends up with a groom position and goes with Doctor Carver, his son Al, and their diving girl Marie. She puts up with groom and farmhand jobs, but what she most wants is to train to be a diving girl- a young woman who rides a horse off the top of a huge tower and dives into a tank of water at the bottom.

As with most horse movies, Sonora ends up training and taming a horse no one else can even get close to, but she has a special connection with this gray horse. Once she proves she can ride the wild horse (who she names Lightning), Doctor Carver agrees to let her train to be a diving girl. Eventually, the show gets a space on the boardwalk at Atlantic City. During the first dive there, however, Sonora’s horse spooks because of the noise of the band and trips as he goes off the tower into the water. Sonora has her eyes open when she hits the water, and ends up with nerve damage that causes her to lose the sight in both her eyes. I won’t ruin the rest of the movie for you if you haven’t seen it, because it’s worth watching for the costumes, setting, and acting. Plus the amazing diving horses, which were a real act back in the time period the movie is set in! Photos of the real Sonora Webster on her diving horses occasionally circulate on Facebook, and I am always amazed when I see the real thing because I grew up with this movie.

Vintage photo of Diving Horses

Watching “Wild Hearts Can’t Be Broken” now, I can definitely see the issues with it. The plot is fairly simple, and the movie just kind of “ends” without a very strong conclusion. But I always love watching Gabrielle Anwar in the role of spunky take-no-shit Sonora Webster. The things that she goes through to accomplish her dreams and the obstacles she overcomes have always spoken to me on a personal level. I guess when I was younger I wished I could be that strong and that’s why I watched this movie so much?

There is a part of this film where Sonora’s horse comes down with colic, and for the longest time it gave me the impression that you could never get hay wet because the horse would get sick immediately if you fed them hay that had been wet. Imagine my surprise when I finally was able to be around horses in my 30’s and I discovered that many horses ate hay that had been soaked for up to thirty minutes! It was only after watching it again that I realized the horse in the movie colicked because of MOLD in the hay. It makes me laugh now that I had such a misconception thanks to a movie, but I also had no practical experience around horses (and I was pretty young, to be honest. I was only eight years old when the movie came out!).

So, that’s my favorite horse movie of all time! If you haven’t seen it but you like movies with horses in them and period pieces, I definitely recommend it. It’s also based off a true story, though of course Disney took some liberties with the story. In my opinion, any library of horse movies should have “Wild Hearts Can’t Be Broken” in it, especially now that it’s available on DVD!

Wild Hearts Movie Poster

What is your favorite horse movie?