Help Us

themed image
 
   

Quote

The air of heaven is that which blows between a horse's ears.
Arabian Proverb

 


 

Welcome to our Kids page

Latest News!

 

The Facts about Burros

  • Wild burros are, for the most part, solitary or intermittently social. Because food is usually scarce in its desert habitat, high concentrations of burros in one area is not possible
  • Burros average between 42 and 48 inches in height and weigh about 500 pounds.
  • Burros evolved in the deserts of North Africa and were brought to the American Southwest by gold prospectors.
  • The word burro is derived from the Spanish word borrico meaning donkey.
  • Burros are well adapted to desert life. They have tough hooves that can handle sand and rock; woolly hair to insulate from desert heat and cold; and a digestive system that can break down almost inedible roughage.
  • Wild burros live in Nevada, Arizona and California, Oregon and Utah.
  • Burros have only five lumbar vertebrae compared with most horses six, and generally have upright, sparse, spiky manes with no forelock.
  • The burro's voice, his mighty bray, allows widely spaced animals to keep in contact or define their territories.

Books to read about burros:

  • Brightly of the Grand Canyon by Marguerite Henry
  • The Burro, Their History by Frank Brookshier

The Facts about Wild Horses

  • Wild horses live in year round family groups called bands.
  • Wild horses come in all colors and sizes, but many are smaller than domestic horses. A typical wild horse stands about 14 hands (56 inches at the shoulder) and weighs about 900 pounds.
  • A male wild horse is called a stallion and a female is called a mare.
  • Wild horses eat grass or roughage and drink water from seeps, springs, streams, or lakes. Adults eat about 20 pounds of plant food each day.
  • It takes 11 months for a foal to be born. In about two hours, the colt can trot along with its mother.
  • There are wild horse herds in Canada, on islands off the east coast of the US, and in 10 western states.

Books to read about wild horses:

  • America's Last Wild Horses and The Wild Colt, The Life of a Young Mustang by Hope Ryden
  • The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses by Paul Goble
  • Misty of Chincoteague, Sea Star: Orphan of Chincoteague,
    Misty's Twilight and Mustang: Wild Spirit of the West,
    all by Marguerite Henry
  • The Mustangs by J. Frank Dobie
  • Into the Wind by Jay Kirkpatrick
  • Mustang by Sharon Curtin