Canadian horse on verge of extinction, warns watchdog - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:48 PM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Canadian horse on verge of extinction, warns watchdog

Canada has a national horse but it's days may be numbered, according to an international watchdog of rare and endangered breeds.

The Canadian breed is a descendent of the first horses given to Canada by King Louis XIV in 1665

The Canadian horse is in danger of becoming extinct, says a B.C. horse breeder. (Hidden Trails)

Canada's little-known national horse is on the verge of extinction, says the Canadian Horse Heritage and Preservation Society, afteran international watchdog raised its status from threatened to critical.

RoxanneSalinas, a horse breeder in Mission, B.C., says the economic downturn, urbanization and people's fascination with show horses may be contributing to the decline of the Canadian horse or le cheval canadien.

"[Canadian horses] make such nice riding horses, people have the mares and they ride them and show them and give them wonderful homes, but they're not reproducing,"SalinastoldDaybreak North.

'Little iron horse'

The Canadian horse, nicknamed the "little iron horse,"descended from two stallions and 20 maressent over to what is now Canadian soil by King Louis XIV of France in July 1665.

The horse was historically used for farm work, transport, riding, and racing, but during the American Civil War, many of them were exported to the U.S. to be used as cavalry horses.

As a result, more than 150,000 horses were lost and the breed became nearly extinct.

According to the Livestock Conservancy, the federal government and Quebec tried programs to preserve the breed, but fewer than 400 Canadian horses remained by 1976.

Canada's official national horse

Itwas officially recognized as a national symbolin 2002 and thestock has now increased to about 2,000.

Still, Salinas says more needs to be done to keep the breed alive, not only because the Canadian horse is a versatile, sturdy and mild-tempered breed, but also simply because they're Canadian.

"They contributed so much to the development of our country, they were used in the fur brigades, they helped peoples settle in the prairies."

"They're a part of our heritage."

To hear the full interview, listen to the audio labelled: Canadian horse's days may be numbered