NEZ PERCES HORSES

This short video is incorporated into a museum exhibit at the National Museum of the American Indian at the Smithsonian Institution on Washington D.C.

Пікірлер: 138

  • @philais
    @philais3 жыл бұрын

    My family settled on the Nez Perce reservation and went to school with them in Lapwai. I graduated from Culdesac. Good people.

  • @lynnanderson2412
    @lynnanderson24122 жыл бұрын

    I fell in love with the Appaloosa as a child. Got my first horse in 1966 when I was twelve. She was a bay mare, no spots, but had the white sclera around the eye and striped hooves. She was registered as breeding stock. Her parents were both very spotted. I got all kinds of information from the Appaloosa Club, including the history of the Nez Perce. My mare "Moonie" had a half moon mark on her forehead. She was 18 months old. I read everything about horses that I could get from books & magazines. I gentle broke and trained her myself. I always had a way with animals. I have had several Appaloosas' through out my life time. I rescued a few. My favorite thing about the breed was the unique coat patterns. Love the spots to this day. Thankful to the Nez Perce for preserving this wonderful breed. (9/5/2021)

  • @mariadelmara.978
    @mariadelmara.978 Жыл бұрын

    Hello, I live in the north of Spain. I am the proud owner of an Appy called Palousse, a great horse with a wonderful character, strong body and beautiful spots. It's three coloured in white, black and chestnut. I love my horse and enjoy ridings in the forest and beach. Thank you for this interesting video to know more about my horse's origins.

  • @pstewart9012
    @pstewart9012 Жыл бұрын

    Horses are Family - 💓💗💓- Appaloosa & Nez Perce - LIVE ON !! God Bless - Nez Perce / Appaloosa - 💯💖❤️❤️❤️

  • @germaineprien7691
    @germaineprien7691 Жыл бұрын

    I love hearing these stories, and this education, I'm a horse crazy girl always have been, much love and many blessings. 🙋‍♀️🙅‍♀️🙆‍♀️

  • @annemcinaw7931
    @annemcinaw7931 Жыл бұрын

    The Appaloosa is my heart horse , i lost my Queenie last Valentines day at 35 years of age , we had been together 33 of those years , nothing on this earth broke my heart, as much than losing her ! We were partners every day of her life , she was the first Appaloosa registered here , JJ Snowqueen , she was a chestnut few spot , but every foal except her one filly , which was a copy of her mother , had spots ! I have her still , she is 22 now and adore her too , her name is Indie , but full name is Salthill Sunshine , thank you to you Native Americans , for such a beautiful animal

  • @mamaboocee
    @mamaboocee5 жыл бұрын

    "We all have the same color blood." When will ALL people understand that. I cant believe anyone would give this video a thumbs down. What's wrong with this world?

  • @rodandjudibowen5665

    @rodandjudibowen5665

    2 жыл бұрын

    My heart is with you! 😊

  • @saddleridge4364
    @saddleridge43643 жыл бұрын

    they are smart, they are hardy, they are easy keepers and of course BEAUTIFUL. My all time favorite breed.

  • @anastasiabeaudry3399
    @anastasiabeaudry339911 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful horses! Your tribe has done a fine job breeding one of the best horses. I hope the world will recognize your work! Much love from Chippewa and Potawatomi :)

  • @trishr.3986

    @trishr.3986

    Жыл бұрын

    Amazing beautiful horses. They are so intuitive.

  • @GothicGinger92
    @GothicGinger923 жыл бұрын

    I love horses they're beautiful

  • @joebarbjb6668
    @joebarbjb66682 жыл бұрын

    As I recall from history, the non treaty wallowa tribes suffered the brunt of the theft of nimiipuu lands. The treaty tribes are still where they have historically Lived. I just visited Nespelem and the graves of Joseph, yellow wolf and other warrior hero’s. I left my heart with them. I’m old now and will soon share the strawberries with my friends.

  • @lightoflion
    @lightoflion3 жыл бұрын

    Thank You 🦁❤️🙏

  • @oregontribal1
    @oregontribal12 жыл бұрын

    I had a beautiful heart horse, he was a Leopard Appaloosa gelding. He lived to be 29 years old. I lost him in 2018, I have yet to find another Appaloosa gelding. Ironically, he had a #5 in spots on his flank and he was my 5th Appaloosa I have owned.

  • @halieswillum248
    @halieswillum2484 жыл бұрын

    I’ve ridden a lot of horses. Saddlebreds, Arabians, thoroughbreds, haflingers, quarter horses, paints, and warmbloods. Appaloosas have always been my favorite. My appys really mean the world to me. They are such quirky horses that know what their job is and are great at whatever that is.

  • @marge6020b
    @marge6020b3 жыл бұрын

    A great short history of the Nez Perce Horse.

  • @raphmaster23
    @raphmaster232 жыл бұрын

    Pretty nifty fact is the LP gene in appys also showed up in prehistoric horses before domestication. There are cave paintings in France that have these spotted horses.

  • @kimnenninger7226
    @kimnenninger72262 жыл бұрын

    A good Appaloosa breeding program should always start with the feet. The Appaloosa horse was superior to the horses bred by most people because Appaloosas didn't need any shoes. The Appaloosa could also do the "Appaloosa Shuffle". He could be ridden for miles and miles with little food and minimal wear to his rider nor himself. We could use a good quality horse like that today.

  • @at5839

    @at5839

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah i really beleive whe could use more horses for transport.

  • @matubbee8876
    @matubbee88763 жыл бұрын

    The Appoloosa is beautiful it reminds me of how different we can be and how unique we are as individuals, although we are all mixed breeds from many different tribes now it's hard to make people understand what is authentic origin or genuine. Sometimes, I can only know what I feel to be true thru the divinity of nature. Every morning if I could see a horse or a cow grazing in the fields reminding me to give thanks to the Great Spirit and to perpetuate the idea that life is beautiful only in the eyes of the beholder.

  • @gilliangreen6680
    @gilliangreen66808 жыл бұрын

    Went out to Leweston Idaho in 2004 with a friend to see the Nez Perce horses and Appaloosas. We were on the Rez for 3 weeks and were made to feel very welcome by the Nez Perce people who had the most wonderful sense of humor. Would have liked to have brought all the horses back to England !! Many thanks to Ronda Walton and Bonnie and Bill Ewing for showing us around, I will never forget it. Richard Gere......yes THE Richard Gere has several of Bonnies horses although she is too modest to say :)

  • @nancyn9064

    @nancyn9064

    7 жыл бұрын

    Lucky you. I can well imagine it was heaven.

  • @lynettedundon1410
    @lynettedundon14103 жыл бұрын

    Appaloosas are by far my favorite!

  • @leeellenwood5461
    @leeellenwood54615 жыл бұрын

    Love learning and hearing stories from horace. Wish I could have met him and just listened to stories of our people. Wish I could have gotten stories from my grandfathers uncle, wally wheeler too. Before it was too late. They were modern day nimiipuu leaders.

  • @jorgeh.r9879
    @jorgeh.r98793 жыл бұрын

    Amazing. Simply amazing. All the best to native americans. I hope you regain as much of your culture as possible.

  • @elainer946
    @elainer9463 жыл бұрын

    I have an appaloosa, his name is Reno, paper name is DRC Trendsetter. He's been with me for 26 yrs. I love him & he is gorgeous!

  • @jimmyjohnson5269
    @jimmyjohnson5269 Жыл бұрын

    I had a Snowflake Appaloosa she was around 5 years old when I bought her, her Name was Sadie, My wife had a Bay Quarter horse. We also had a Gruela or a line back Dun. His name was Charlie. He was 31 year's old when he passed away!

  • @moshebigelow5308
    @moshebigelow53083 жыл бұрын

    Wow! thank you, this was beautiful

  • @nakaia44
    @nakaia448 жыл бұрын

    Very wonderful and beautiful job on these horse. Keep up the good work and I wish you all the best.

  • @filly4billy2002
    @filly4billy20026 жыл бұрын

    You do see the world differently from the back of a horse... I enjoy being part of this world at the pace of my appaloosa horse... :)

  • @juliefeasal8878
    @juliefeasal88783 жыл бұрын

    Most sincere respect! Appaloosas are the first breed of horse to always hold a place in my heart. Your horses are stunning. Someday i hope to see Nez Perce horse and may be ride one!

  • @knit1purl1
    @knit1purl15 жыл бұрын

    This was very nice and informative.

  • @khanimran7465
    @khanimran74653 жыл бұрын

    The connection between man an horse is time an memorial i am turko mongol we lived on the horse literally when the car is gone one-day The horse will take its right full place again

  • @mikewhiskey4467
    @mikewhiskey44672 жыл бұрын

    I rescued an App Id swear was out of your line. Real upright like the akle teke, red roan with a blanket on his hip. Different in nature than the rest of our herd. Hes fearless and very dominant, super athletic, light in the front and all hip and scary fast. 16 hh

  • @FindYourGait
    @FindYourGait9 жыл бұрын

    Great video will be sharing with my horsecamp kids this week.

  • @pstewart9012
    @pstewart9012 Жыл бұрын

    Thank-You 🇨🇦 Spotted ARE The Legacy of ‘The Horse’

  • @randybutler4772
    @randybutler477210 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing.🐴

  • @jillianwachmer8584
    @jillianwachmer85842 жыл бұрын

    Nez Perce, all Chief Josephs ancestors,.@ their horses, I feel the pain,.I need one now to ride off,.my greatest respect I gladly give with all my heart @ spirit.

  • @bobcatbikerlady
    @bobcatbikerlady7 жыл бұрын

    SOME BEAUTIFUL HORSES

  • @naytch_cha_beatz
    @naytch_cha_beatz Жыл бұрын

    I wish with all my heart that history never happened and that they still had their land

  • @nailsbyglynis858
    @nailsbyglynis8589 ай бұрын

    The horses are beautiful, but the fact the horses name is Rizz had me giggling

  • @gilliangreen2920
    @gilliangreen29203 жыл бұрын

    The U.S National Stallion board will confirm that the Appaloosa has had pure breed status since 1950. This allowed the Appaloosa to be issued pure breed papers instead of the grade papers previously issued. It is interesting to note that the Akhal Teke horse is most likely the grandsire of the modern Thoroughbred and not the Arab as previously thought by many. In a study that had support from the Arabian horse foundation in June 2020, it says that Contrary to popular belief we could detect NO significant genomic contribution of the Arab breed to the Thoroughbred racehorse, including Y chromosome ancestry. Read the report, Genome diversity and the origin of the Arabian horse, published 16th June 2020. The Turkoman horses the report includes are present day Akhal Tekes. This calls into question the role of the Arabian as a founder of the Thoroughbred breed, and more generally, to its influence on other horse breeds.

  • @lindalemieux4524

    @lindalemieux4524

    2 жыл бұрын

    It calls into question the way Europeans communication skills. They used where horses were from as the breed they were. The example is Goldolpin Arabian, owned by Goldolpin yet not a Arabian. This is easily misconstrued in translation and the Thoroughbred isn't the only example of European writings about horses in the early centuries

  • @Sadieadler1988
    @Sadieadler1988 Жыл бұрын

    I love my little Appaloosa even though she's stubborn at times.

  • @348Tobico
    @348Tobico3 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately for the Appaloosa horses, the Horse club has allowed far too much Quarter horse blood to be bred into the registry. Thus they have horses that are just spotted big butt Quarter horses. Thank goodness the Nez Perce tribe decided to reclaim their birthright and go back to the original type and shape of THEIR HORSES. A wiry, wise compact gutsy horse with stamina for the mountains and any other place! I owned Appaloosas bred in Idaho in the early 60's who had no Quarter horse blood. They were phenomenal at everything we trained to do. I loved those creatures more than any human because they had no ulterior motives. Just love for me and willingness to try as hard as I did. I feel blessed to this day for having been their partner in all our adventures.

  • @mpista7182
    @mpista718210 ай бұрын

    Many years ago I read a book about Indian horses that stated original Indian ponies had one less vertebrae and that is how they were identified by archeologists. I have no idea if this is true but it was a very good book and it showed a picture of one of the last horses with that marker. I'm sorry it was so long ago that's all I remember.

  • @gilliangreen2920
    @gilliangreen2920 Жыл бұрын

    There is a theory that Russian fur traders brought Akhal Tekes over to America before the Spanish conquistadors arrived with there much stockier and smaller mounts. These horses were cross bred long before the majority of the Europeans even arrived to the western states. Consider carefully Meriwether Lewis comment on the original Appaloosas (that out ran the American cavalry) written in 1805......They are lofty (meaning tall) and elegantly formed (meaning fine).......and many of them look like fine English coursers ( old English word for racehorse). The Spanish stock decendants available at this time did not fit this description, certainly not the Quarter horse blood infused so readily at a later date. It is interesting to note that the Tetrarch...... a prolific Irish bred Thoroughbred stallion..... was known in England as the spotted wonder . He is considered Worldwide (through his daughter Mumtaz Mahal......who also showed a spotted coat) to be responsible for some of the best ' thoroughbred ' horses in history including ......Shergar, Northern Dancer, Tiger Roll, Red Rum, Secretariat, Frankel, Mill Reef, Galileo, Sadlers Wells, Nijinsky and many more ! All the above horses trace directly back to The Tetrarch. Other thoroughbreds who showed a spotted coat in the early days of racing include....Mumtaz Begum, le Semaritain, Thormamby , Bend Or (who won the English Derby) and Pantaloon. More recently the famous Japanese racehorse Buchiko, who very interestingly .......also traces back to The Tetrarch....has created quite a stir in the modern racing world !

  • @gigidahl1664
    @gigidahl16643 жыл бұрын

    That's stunning thank you for sharing your story keep doing that I love it

  • @njnagler
    @njnagler10 жыл бұрын

    The Nez Perces horses have always seemed to be the American equivalent of the Arabian, just as smart, just as tough, just as people loving. These horses have the conformation of the original horses and it's good to see that. I first heard of the Appaloosa horse from Margaret Henry's great "Album of Horses". I got to know a couple in the early 70's and one was a snow patterned, original build App. Now the ones you see around here are spotted Quarter Horses. Seems strange to me.

  • @nancyn9064

    @nancyn9064

    7 жыл бұрын

    Each breed was developed for certain traits. I'm not fussy enough (sorry) to figure one breed, race, or species is better than others. Arabians are my favorite breed too. Morgans and Morabs next. Then any horse, purebred or not. It is the individual horse, influenced by its breeding and training (or lack of it) that impresses me as much as anything. Arabians have contributed to nearly every breed on earth. Their original world of the desert bred tough horses. (Again - Album of Horses) An Arabian can take on those 100 mile rides where a Belgian draft probably would have a little trouble. But the Belgian is an awesome horse in its own way. I think it'd be able to out pull any Arabian.

  • @nancyn9064

    @nancyn9064

    7 жыл бұрын

    Appaloosas seem to be getting quite popular. Their coat colors are pretty striking. The original temperament, bred into them, added to by the loving attention of the conquering military by crossing them with draft horses (no, not all of them), and now, many are part Quarter Horse which only enhances the temperament and emphasizes their abilities that rescued them from extinction. They were basically saved by an article in Western Horseman, still an excellent magazine. I have known a few Apps personally. And I think that is a good term. Personality! Sheba was as close to a true type App, snow pattern, as you could ever get, regal as heck too, but talented. Saki was abandoned by his mother and came to my friend's farm in the back seat of my Buick. He was part draft horse and only developed a few patches of white hair on his black coat. Yet he had all the other traits and signs of the Appaloosa. He turned out to be a pretty decent hunter type. Great horses now long gone.

  • @angelcosmic145
    @angelcosmic145 Жыл бұрын

    ❤Nez Pierce ❤Appaloosa❤🧲❤

  • @robertlaporte2998
    @robertlaporte2998 Жыл бұрын

    Sad what has happened to what they did to the Navajo brother who trained those horses for years then sold him out and the horse too and barely recovered if it weren't for a few elders who hid them,there would be none left. True.

  • @jimmyjohnson5269
    @jimmyjohnson5269 Жыл бұрын

    We need more videos about Horses

  • @OneGypsyTraveler
    @OneGypsyTraveler2 жыл бұрын

    The Appaloosa horses that I have dealt with have sure gotten a bad rap. Personally I attribute that to two main things.. First is the innate intelligence of the breed including the individual personality of the horse itself and secondly operator failure of the person working with the horse. I have found that the Appaloosa in general are very intelligent and hence if they don’t like you, you are doomed. You will not trick them or wear them down, or beat them into submitting. On the other hand if your Appaloosa likes you, you will not find a better and more faithful friend, willing to anything you ask. As far as operator failure goes, it tied into my above statements… re: if your Appy doesn’t like you, ( if you are not as smart as the Appy ) you’ll know right away, I wish you luck.

  • @CuttingEdgetools
    @CuttingEdgetools Жыл бұрын

    Love the Spotted Appaloosa’s . Majestic Creatures. The Spaniard’s brought them over on ships- But -The Nez’ Perce’ and Plateau Tribes treated them as Equal creatures not Beasts of Burden.

  • @nancyn9064
    @nancyn90648 жыл бұрын

    Maybe, as one person said, the Arabians are better. I do love and prefer the Arabian. But I have met several Appaloosa's in my life and knowing their history, they were originally handled very much like Arabians. No, the foals did not drink camels' milk. But they were hardy, people oriented, and bred for where they lived. They are interesting horses. The original Appaloosa, I think, is the same as, or close too, the Rangerbred. The first App I met was of that type, with the snow pattern. The next one I met was a day old foal, whose mother rejected. He traveled to his new home (my friend's place) in the back seat of my Buick Electra. He was more like the 'cavalry bred' horse. After the pale faces beat the Nez Perce, they bred as many as they could to draft horses. Saki was of that type. He as almost what one would call a warmblood or sport horse. He was born with three white spots over his left point of hip on his black coat. We were always excited to see if he was getting more spots or not. He didn't but we liked him anyway. Now you don't see many of the original standard but Appaloosa coated Quarter Horse. I have no complaint about the bulldog type Quarter Horse, but Apps were not built like that. I also don't see the different coat patterns. Most are leopard or blanket patterned. The Nez Perce should be allowed to continue breeding their distinctive horses. And thank Western Horseman, still an excellent magazine, for saving the breed from extinction.

  • @theCosmicQueen
    @theCosmicQueen Жыл бұрын

    i'd love to own one or more.

  • @lynnrussell1630
    @lynnrussell1630 Жыл бұрын

    Everything looks better between the ears! Ride a regal Appy!

  • @bubblesezblonde
    @bubblesezblonde Жыл бұрын

    Nice well done vid

  • @jamiedixon1314
    @jamiedixon13142 жыл бұрын

    The sprit is part of me nature never dies I my live in ingland yet part of me is part of you

  • @curtisneilson5829
    @curtisneilson582910 ай бұрын

    My sons related to many people in this documentary he just passed away

  • @alvanickel
    @alvanickel10 жыл бұрын

    I'll be watching those nez perces horses!

  • @veejaymexico4840
    @veejaymexico48403 жыл бұрын

    I feel sorry for you 24 people who were compelled to give this a thumbs down! Would you own up to it and comment on why you found it offensive. I certainly would welcome your reasons, not to argue , but to, perhaps learn something valuable from you. May the good Lord BLESS AND KEEP YOU!

  • @poemattie430
    @poemattie4307 жыл бұрын

    Appaloosa is a truly horses, I'd like to buy, but procedures for importing are troublesome and I am holding it for now.

  • @judithgraham7218
    @judithgraham7218 Жыл бұрын

    True we all have the same color blood when I worked in a hospital in Arkansas in the 60’s blood and to be labeled black or white even though it was the same if not people would refuse transfusions that’s very sad

  • @oneofakind5668
    @oneofakind56686 жыл бұрын

    All our people

  • @shelleyharris9349
    @shelleyharris934911 ай бұрын

    Emotional

  • @TammySaj-zm6kr
    @TammySaj-zm6krАй бұрын

    I want one ❤❤❤

  • @cindyrissal3628
    @cindyrissal3628 Жыл бұрын

    Hopefully there are still some genuine Appaloosas left...?

  • @valcecama-hogsett4174
    @valcecama-hogsett41745 жыл бұрын

    We have a lot of wild horses in Oregon that are spotted and look like they have akhal teke. The BLM just rounded up horses in what they called the Warm Springs HMA. I believe these horses are truly Nez Perce horses. They gathered them to do experiments on pregnant mares to sterilize them and see how many will abort their foals. Citizens Against Equine Slaughter (CAES) is fighting them in court to stop it. One of their board members is Six Nations Iroquois, Oneida. If anyone has information on whether or not these horses may be connected to the Nex Perce horses please contact CAES at 541.315.6650

  • @poemattie430
    @poemattie4307 жыл бұрын

    Appaloosa love Japanese In addition, I have studied native American for a long time.and What I am very interested in is Chief Joseph of the Nez Perces.情報の修正を提案元の訳を表示今後とも翻訳の改善にご協力をお願いいたしますありがとうございました修正していただいた翻訳は、翻訳の品質向上に活用させていただきます。このため、修正内容を他のユーザーに匿名で公開する場合があります。送信閉じるGoogle 翻訳コミュニティにぜひご参加ください私が非常に興味を持つのがChief Joseph of the Nez Perces.ですWatashi ga hijō ni kyōmi o motsu no ga chīfu josefu of the Nez Perces.Desu私が非常に興味を持つのがChief Joseph of the Nez Perces.です の定義私が非常に興味を持つのがChief Joseph of the Nez Perces.です の同義語私が非常に興味を持つのがChief Joseph of the Nez Perces.です の例関連項目「私が非常に興味を持つのがChief Joseph of the Nez Perces.です」の翻訳

  • @leeellenwood5461

    @leeellenwood5461

    5 жыл бұрын

    poe mattie check out chief looking glass too. Both vary brave leaders in many aspects

  • @robertkunecki9237
    @robertkunecki92373 жыл бұрын

    Breeding to akhal ? You guys doing a good job

  • @shelleyharris9349
    @shelleyharris934911 ай бұрын

    Loud chirping bird's

  • @luigivillanueva4507
    @luigivillanueva45077 жыл бұрын

    Whats the diff of Mustang and this breed Appaloosa

  • @nancyn9064

    @nancyn9064

    7 жыл бұрын

    I love your answer, but I don't think you are quite correct. Appaloosas, technically, were considered a color breed. (Not any more.) Any other breed could possibly have the Appaloosa coat colors. It really is more the case of the Spanish horses were 'freed' by the Native Americans or by their own desire to reclaim their old home. Those horses, as feral horses, became the mustang. I'd think there were and are Appaloosas in some mustang herd. The NP developed the original Appaloosas through careful breeding from the mustangs they caught. And mustangs are truly a breed but are any feral horse, which is different from a true wild horse. There are some mustangs that aren't ready to be pin-ups but there are some herds that have been able to keep the Spanish blood of their ancestors and are quite handsome.

  • @lukaszobidzinski4713
    @lukaszobidzinski47139 жыл бұрын

    Moje marzenie

  • @keithmaxwell2169
    @keithmaxwell21693 жыл бұрын

    Our Government should be Very Ashamed that they KILLED the original herd of the NEZ PERCE I am So Glad they are keeping the breed going, I would like to have Another APPALOOSA horse but it's a Long way to go get another one from the Tribe over here in Alabama

  • @gilliangreen6680
    @gilliangreen66807 жыл бұрын

    It has been documented that Appaloosas are the oldest identifiable breed of domestic horses in the world today for several years now. Michael Hofreiter of the University of York published his findings in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. An International team of researchers has used DNA containing the LP gene (appaloosa gene) found in the bones of horses in the Peche Merle caves in France, the bones have been carbon dated 25,000 years old. For more info read the website History in the headlines :)

  • @mikewarner2285

    @mikewarner2285

    4 жыл бұрын

    Watched a viddy claming the apps came in from Russia via ice bridge

  • @Connemara1st

    @Connemara1st

    4 жыл бұрын

    not the oldest pure breed.

  • @gilliangreen2920

    @gilliangreen2920

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Connemara1st British Appaloosa Society horses have stud book status so they are a pure breed. Also , Appaloosas are one of only two breeds that is not man made. There is 25,000 years of evidence proving this........Look up the Peche Merle caves in France.....and you will see.

  • @Connemara1st

    @Connemara1st

    4 жыл бұрын

    As a COLOR "breed", which has been crossed with many true breeds of different conformations/body types bred for different uses, and has been quite a mix here in America.

  • @gilliangreen2920

    @gilliangreen2920

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Connemara1st yes Appaloosas are very popular worldwide not just the u.s, being the oldest breed they have been used to influence and better many other breeds. Read up on the facts .......then get back to me.

  • @sherifleck5906
    @sherifleck59063 жыл бұрын

    God bless the American Indian, what they had the Military came in and took it. The American Government takes what it wants and we have to just deal with it, I'm done dealing with it.

  • @tash12xii
    @tash12xii3 жыл бұрын

    Qe'ci'yew'yew' 🥰

  • @kcjohnson630
    @kcjohnson6306 жыл бұрын

    I have owned several Appaloosas. My trainer and I both agree that the Appaloosa coloring originated from the Knapstrupper breed of Europe (the original spotted horse). These horses came to America with the early Europeans. The Nez Perce Indians were the first to breed what has become the Appaloosa of today!

  • @yeetngreet148

    @yeetngreet148

    4 жыл бұрын

    Kc johnson I know this is two years late but the Knabstrupper was not the foundation breed. Knabstruppers were developed MUCH later from a chestnut leopard mare in 1812 and a combination of Warmbloods. Whereas the appaloosa coat and breed have existed thousands of years before that.

  • @FreeSpiritBudgieLady
    @FreeSpiritBudgieLady7 жыл бұрын

    It seems that the Appaloosa came to the America's via a land bridge from Asia before the continents divided, and not as first thought from the Spanish horses brought over much, much later. The Appaloosa is a much more ancient breed. This has been genetically proven, so its possible that the Nez Perce people have ridden them from a much earlier period. I wish you all the success in the world,. ;-) x

  • @nancyn9064

    @nancyn9064

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'd like to see your references. From everything I have read, the first horses, Eohippus, terrier sized, evolved in the Americas, about 60 million years ago. They evolved as the environment evolved. I THINK they developed very close to Equus. Not sure on that one. Horses did cross the land bridge, probably the very one the Native Indians crossed, only in the other direction. The horses became extinct here and were brought 'home' by the Spaniards. There are other spotted breeds in the world and I could well imagine there'd be a variety of breeds, though mostly Spanish (Arab crosses). I haven't read much about this sort of thing for years, but I do know the multitude of breeds basically came from those horses, developing into pony, draft, and riding horses, again because of environment. Breeding best to best to develop the needed traits has done the rest. Much like the development of dogs, who have the largest relative size different of a species. (Though I haven't checked on the comparisons of the largest horses, Shires as a breed and individual Belgians, against the smallest of the miniature HORSES.

  • @teresahudson9008

    @teresahudson9008

    6 жыл бұрын

    CAL JACKSON

  • @pamelaturnbull4344

    @pamelaturnbull4344

    6 жыл бұрын

    ohhhhh THANK YOU at last someone agrees with me about the European propaganda and spin ! Of course those humans brought their horses with them across the land bridge, it's common sense. Just look at the horse people of Mongolia, listen to the language ; such HUGE similarities cannot be coincidence. And nor did Chris Colombus bring back syphilis from the Americas (as again spun by Europeans) strong evidence has been found in ROMAN skeleton remains in Herculaenium . So YA BOO SUCKS to the Historians who have spouted such tripe.

  • @crazyponygirl

    @crazyponygirl

    6 жыл бұрын

    Nancy N I agree with you and the horses in Americans went extinct around 10,000 yrs ago along with other megafauna. If their ancestors rode those horses before they went extinct there would of been signs of physical evidence of domestication on the fur and skeleton bodies of those extinct horses.

  • @sacredcolors1078

    @sacredcolors1078

    6 жыл бұрын

    CAL JACKSON umm that is not correct u got an F-

  • @PahaPoniesSpanishMustangs
    @PahaPoniesSpanishMustangs4 ай бұрын

    Hm.

  • @khanimran1238
    @khanimran12386 жыл бұрын

    That's keep culture and make some money to ya wanna becarefull they might take business

  • @shelleyharris9349
    @shelleyharris934911 ай бұрын

    ✝️☮️🌞🧭🌎✌️😎😇🎼🔔🪶🚗

  • @johnward8064
    @johnward8064 Жыл бұрын

    I owned ten Appaloosas, and read everything I could about the horse and the Nez Perce. You cannot get a straight answer on the origins. It is mostly myth. The horses that evaded the U.S. Cavalry were slaughtered.

  • @Connemara1st
    @Connemara1st4 жыл бұрын

    The Appaloosa is not the oldest pure breed, but the color genetics have been cross bred thousands of generations with many breeds, including with Quarter horses, Thoroughbreds, Arabians, carriage horses, etc.

  • @Connemara1st
    @Connemara1st4 жыл бұрын

    Dog breeds can be used as an analogy. There are numerous breeds of dogs which have similar coloring. Just because their color can be traced back thousands of years, does not make any one of those breeds "the oldest pure breed in history". A gene for eye, skin, and coat patterns that are found in American Appaloosa and OTHER breeds, does not establish them as the oldest pure breed in history. Body type aka conformation, and other factors consistently bred to repeat and then kept pure by breeding only the same to other bloodlines within the breed, over many generations and years, is what creates a pure breed. And that is why a labrador is not a poodle, let alone a wolf.

  • @lindalemieux4524
    @lindalemieux45242 жыл бұрын

    The Nimiipuu had the Appaloosa before any Spanish or European colonists came. The Pueblo revolt which you think was the reason for the indigenous peoples having horses is a false narrative. The people in that Spanish settlement were eating leather for crying out loud, they were facing famine. Don't tell the Whiteman version. Tell the truth. The Ahlke Teke? You think that is the foundation for the Appaloosa?

  • @Linduine

    @Linduine

    2 жыл бұрын

    I heard about this, but it is highly unlikely that the natives had horses before the Spaniards came. It is true that the horse is originating from the Americas, but it died out there and the rest survived in the Eurasian steppes.

  • @lindalemieux4524

    @lindalemieux4524

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Linduine I will give you the facts about the indigenous peoples always having horses. Not only do many tribes have stories about horses there are tribes that have always had a horse culture. Many indigenous peoples words are horse related and had sophisticated horse concepts. Plus they had riding skills well beyond that of the European colonists. Last year scientists discovered horse DNA that is dated 5,000 years ago. That is a Yukon horse. 1520 March 30th King Phillip of Spain put a embargo on horses from Spain to the America's. The Spanish didn't have control of the region until 1492 and the first breeding of horses is documented as the carthusian monastry in 1476. The wild horses of the Iberian peninsula was extinct at that time. The DNA testing of the IBE gene expression goes only as far back as 2700 years ago. 1523 Spanish explorers off the banks of North Carolina documented wild horses. 1642 Louis Joseph LaVerendre went to visit the tribe known as the horse people. 1765-1775 35,000 horses ( most were Narragansett Pacer's) were shipped from the colonies.( That is too many horses to be from the Spanish) The Chilcotin tribe's horses were tested and found to be closely associated with the Yakut horses. The indigenous peoples are now several generations removed from their original culture. The government put children in boarding school and de-culturize them. The government put restrictions and told many lies and cheated the indigenous peoples of their land, of their heritage and of their culture. Do you really think that the bison survived yet the horse didn't? The horse has adapted to all climates and evolved. Even the mitochondrial DNA research shows that the Mustang DNA is more closely associated with the Ancient horse samples. Not the Spanish horses. Remember shipping was both ways across the ocean. Spain was short on horses. 800 years of war will make many animal species go extinct.

  • @theCosmicQueen

    @theCosmicQueen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lindalemieux4524 there's a vid on youtube about finding the ancestor of appaloosas and they found one in central asia. supposedly. so it may have been from there a long time ago. thre's been people going to the americas from asia in the past 3000 or so years. including assyrians/ sumerians who " came among" the Nez Perce, according to Chief Joseph, regarding the cuneiform tablet he carried in his Assyrian Star medicine bag....

  • @jerrydelp7973
    @jerrydelp79733 жыл бұрын

    They really dont take that good care of them I've seen a lot of them that are skin and bones in the lapwai area

  • @bigloo2003
    @bigloo20034 жыл бұрын

    They're pronouncing it wrong.

  • @yeetngreet148

    @yeetngreet148

    4 жыл бұрын

    louisc Doucet they are actual Nez Perce people, they are allowed to say it however they see fit.

  • @wendylinkem6201

    @wendylinkem6201

    4 жыл бұрын

    That is the way it is pronounced in the northwest.

  • @joeday397
    @joeday3972 жыл бұрын

    And now they sit in that field stagnating looking less appaloosa every generation due to the blind/jealous criticism and bickering of the uninvolved tribal members against the ndn people who were actually doing something with the appaloosas.

  • @cynthiarosas8214
    @cynthiarosas82142 жыл бұрын

    Everyone needs salvation here are the words of salvation please forgive me jesus im a sinner come into my heart and save me from my sin I no that you are the savior and I no that you died for me on calvary and I no that God raise you from the dead and you are alive and I thankyou for your salvation in Jesus holy name amen and its important to always ask for forgiveness every night so your always right standing with the lord please give these words to someone

  • @aviancypress5181
    @aviancypress5181 Жыл бұрын

    Nez perce tribe havea fine eye for breeding horse, they found one of the best breeds and crossed it with Appaloosa to improve the bloodline