What an incredible display of horses and horsemanship! I pray I will get to see them in person someday, but for now, I go to the Lippizaner shows to see them..
I love this! The only thing I would correct is that observation is a large part of science, and knowing which horses to breed to achieve the desired outcome is scientific even if there was no blood test.
What I wonder is that It might be best to let the hoarses choose there mates freely. I dont know if that would lead to a inferior hoarses but it is more in line with the way they can live in the wild.
@@Christian-vs2rf I understand what you’re saying, but horses choose based on biology - hormones. In captivity, horses need to have good temperament. It’s the horses with bad temperaments that end up being sold at auction to kill buyers and sent to Mexico for meat. It’s a responsibility of the breeder to make sure that the only horses they breed have excellent temperaments, solid minds, and don’t have known genetic problems. If we just turned our horses out to choose their own mate, we’d end up with a very smart horse, but one that could have conformation issues like dropped pasterns, short fetlocks, or be prone to colic or laminitis. Those are just a few issues that our current herd are dealing with. Currently, I have only one horse I would breed, but she has a fertility problem that causes potential health issues…. All of my horses have amazing things about themselves, but I wouldn’t be a responsible breeder if I let them choose.
@@jenniferbell4571 I am with you on the temperament issue if the hoarses are kept in captivity. However I dont think illness would become more widespread if they can choose there mates. As you said they choose based on biology. One day when I live together with hoarses on our land I wont keep them in a fenced area. They will have a beautiful shelter for the time they want ro be there and can roam the land however they want. My favorite statement about hoarses is that they choose to carry us, and could throw us off there backs in a heart beat if the wanted to.
I don't mean to be negative, or denigrate this woman, but I have been around many many different breeds of horses, in herds with foals...especially "hot bloods" such as Arabians and Thoroughbreds. It's the persons behavior that sets a horse off, not their breed. I have been accepted calmly and in very friendly fashion and with curiosity and acceptance from them. I understand this woman wanting to "talk up" the breed, but I can't stand it when she makes it sound as if this is one of the few breeds that are like this, and they are so special and amazing in temperament. ANY responsible breeder strives for even temperament. I love the Andalusian breed, among others, but please don't make it sound as if these are "magical" traits that few have. Be real. These are horses.
This is the barb horses, amazigh North African horses. Strong, smart, short head and ears, bigger hooves, thick neck and big chest this is the pure barb.
"Our horses are our friends" Bull shit. They are not your friends when you have 2 fucking bits in their mouth to control them with major pressure and pain. That is not friendship, that is just a slave and slave owner relationship. It also shows his ignorance with horses. No horses need a bit if they are trained correctly. Those who say other wise don't know a damn thing about horse behavior.
If this horse is completely Spanish, then the Alhambra and the Mosque of Cordoba are also completely Spanish, it is very clear that there is an Arab influence in these horses
They are similar breeds, however bereber horses are a different breed, "andalusian" horses are essentially the native breed and have been around for probably over 20 000 years in the iberian peninsula way before the jihadists invaded
ROFL. These are ***NOT*** pure blooded ancient bloodline Carthusian Andalusians. Anyone who knows the breed can tell instantly as ****true*** Carthusian Andalusians have **concave** faces, like Arabians, and are ***ONLY*** grey. What you are showing here are the modernday Andalusians - the run of mill average Andalusian, a mongrel in comparison to Carthusians as it is influenced by other breeds - with some potential Carthusian Andalusian influence.
Dear Eliza A, thank you for your comment. We asked the stud farm about it. Here's what they said: "It is important to make clear, the Cartujano horse is a lineage WITHIN the Andalusian Horse (please check Spanish laws BOE-A-2018-749 and BOE-A-2019-2859). Therefore the racial prototype is the same: www.ancce.es/tutorial-de-la-raza/english
Regarding the shape of the head, Cartujano lineage has never had concave profiles. The face of the Cartujanos have always been either straight or slightly convex. [...]
Regarding the colors or coats of these horses in ancient times, please find enclosed a picture with the figures of the amount of horses that the monks had from 1747 to 1806, separated by colors. This information has been taken from the official archive of historical documents of the city Jerez de la Frontera. www.revistadehistoriadejerez.com/revista-de-historia-de-jerez/volumen-11-12-2005-2006/ Number 11-12, 2005/2006, page 64. The monks had horses registered with 6 different colors. In fact in 1747 the 60% of what they had was brown and 32% black. Only a 5.5% was grey (white). These coats changed over the years and in 1806, the brown and black coats together were 52.5% and grey coat supposed 40.6%" We hope these information are helpful for you. If you have any further question please let us know. Best, DW Euromaxx
@@dweuromaxx Thank you for explaining this and sharing this important information. Now, will you kindly send me a sample horse? I promise I will love it forever! a I’ll even let it share my bed! ❤️ 🇺🇸 liza
@@dweuromaxx I must agree with everything you said. Especially the shape of the nose bridge. The oldest most authentic bloodlines have convexed faces that curve slightly outward. The exact opposite of the Arabian horse.
Andalusian horses are direct descendants of Iberian horses, that is, endemic to Spanish territory. We talk about horses with more than 20,000 years of history, on their backs and have a remote origin. Andalusian horses already existed at the end of the Neolithic period, when they began to be domesticated and ridden by warriors and nomadic tribes.
An amazing horse, intelligent, sporty and beautiful.
What an incredible display of horses and horsemanship! I pray I will get to see them in person someday, but for now, I go to the Lippizaner shows to see them..
Honoring horses! Thank you that stallion is spectacular.
Andalusian, a horse of pure courage & nobility ♥
RIP RedRum.
Wonderful horses.
Beautiful horses!
Simply beautiful horses!
We think so too!
My favorite breed
Nice horses
Fine sense of rhythm.
that breed of horse is in a game called Star Stable Online. it has so many coats there. and I have the copper coat Andalusian
I know this is an old comment, but its so funny to see another SSO player commenting on a horse video! I have the dapple gray Andy XD
Awesome white Andalusia horse... Black Frisian horse and the brown Scottish draft horse 🌐🐎🏅❤
My brother knows this too. That is 2 of them.
I love this! The only thing I would correct is that observation is a large part of science, and knowing which horses to breed to achieve the desired outcome is scientific even if there was no blood test.
What I wonder is that It might be best to let the hoarses choose there mates freely. I dont know if that would lead to a inferior hoarses but it is more in line with the way they can live in the wild.
@@Christian-vs2rf I understand what you’re saying, but horses choose based on biology - hormones. In captivity, horses need to have good temperament. It’s the horses with bad temperaments that end up being sold at auction to kill buyers and sent to Mexico for meat. It’s a responsibility of the breeder to make sure that the only horses they breed have excellent temperaments, solid minds, and don’t have known genetic problems. If we just turned our horses out to choose their own mate, we’d end up with a very smart horse, but one that could have conformation issues like dropped pasterns, short fetlocks, or be prone to colic or laminitis. Those are just a few issues that our current herd are dealing with.
Currently, I have only one horse I would breed, but she has a fertility problem that causes potential health issues….
All of my horses have amazing things about themselves, but I wouldn’t be a responsible breeder if I let them choose.
@@jenniferbell4571 I am with you on the temperament issue if the hoarses are kept in captivity.
However I dont think illness would become more widespread if they can choose there mates. As you said they choose based on biology.
One day when I live together with hoarses on our land I wont keep them in a fenced area. They will have a beautiful shelter for the time they want ro be there and can roam the land however they want.
My favorite statement about hoarses is that they choose to carry us, and could throw us off there backs in a heart beat if the wanted to.
@@Christian-vs2rf That sounds wonderful. :)
Vivan los hidalgos españoles
HEARTS
Dean Martin bred these horses on his ranch.
@dakotahstr Everybody loves somebody sometimes. That's Amore. 😆
Beautiful how can we buy a horse from you?
@ Ali Haider Haider Search for "Yeguada Cartuja" if you really plan to visit the breeding farm.
Lots of salty Arabs in the comments.
You know Arabians blood in those horses
@@adelking66 Its in the spanish too
@@adelking66 no shit sherlock, al andalus was a thing for 500 years in spain
👍👍
Maybe unbraid the mane, so he can use it against the flies; when not in competition...
Obviamente. Y se les trenza durante el trabajo para no dañarla.
I don't mean to be negative, or denigrate this woman, but I have been around many many different breeds of horses, in herds with foals...especially "hot bloods" such as Arabians and Thoroughbreds. It's the persons behavior that sets a horse off, not their breed. I have been accepted calmly and in very friendly fashion and with curiosity and acceptance from them. I understand this woman wanting to "talk up" the breed, but I can't stand it when she makes it sound as if this is one of the few breeds that are like this, and they are so special and amazing in temperament. ANY responsible breeder strives for even temperament. I love the Andalusian breed, among others, but please don't make it sound as if these are "magical" traits that few have. Be real. These are horses.
Why do you have to ride "dressage" in the pasture, let the horse have some fun!
lovely video but holy cow the brutal mispronunciation of several Spanish words
They did their best which is more than you can say for most non Spanish speakers.
@@plousia welp I have to admit you have a point there.
The translation is awful
Compare him to other horses
Like
Pure bloodline? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 u funny
Andalusian horses is a horses of European Arabian-Andalusian
This is the barb horses, amazigh North African horses. Strong, smart, short head and ears, bigger hooves, thick neck and big chest this is the pure barb.
Except they've been around for thousamd of years in the peninsula.
Spanish horses
@@JM-fo1te and how many years your family been in the peninsula ? Not even 500 years
@@adelking66 I literally have family in Spain, pendejo lol
Andalusian horses are different from Iberian horses. They are a mixture between local Iberian and Berber horses brought by the Moors🇲🇦@@JM-fo1te
"Our horses are our friends" Bull shit. They are not your friends when you have 2 fucking bits in their mouth to control them with major pressure and pain. That is not friendship, that is just a slave and slave owner relationship. It also shows his ignorance with horses. No horses need a bit if they are trained correctly. Those who say other wise don't know a damn thing about horse behavior.
If this horse is completely Spanish, then the Alhambra and the Mosque of Cordoba are also completely Spanish, it is very clear that there is an Arab influence in these horses
@فهد A horse is a horse, of course of course. 😉
@@dweuromaxx
These horses are the result of a marriage between an Arabian horse and a Spanish horse and are not entirely Spanish
@@user-dg5vx8li8f your name looks like bomb wires :3
The Mosque of Cordoba was a church first (and a Cathedral now). So yes.
The influence on the moorish barb horse is more than obvious in the breed. To say its a pure Spanish breed is nonsense
They are similar breeds, however bereber horses are a different breed, "andalusian" horses are essentially the native breed and have been around for probably over 20
000 years in the iberian peninsula way before the jihadists invaded
All horses origanated from stepp by your standards no horse would be concerned pure. Are all dog breeds impure too?
Miles de años antes de que los árabes invadiesen la península ibérica, los pura sangre andaluces cabalgaban libres por ella.
mooooooroooooo al tiempo .....
It's more the opposite. This is the pure breed that has thousands of years in Spain while the Berber is influenced by it.
ROFL. These are ***NOT*** pure blooded ancient bloodline Carthusian Andalusians. Anyone who knows the breed can tell instantly as ****true*** Carthusian Andalusians have **concave** faces, like Arabians, and are ***ONLY*** grey.
What you are showing here are the modernday Andalusians - the run of mill average Andalusian, a mongrel in comparison to Carthusians as it is influenced by other breeds - with some potential Carthusian Andalusian influence.
Dear Eliza A, thank you for your comment. We asked the stud farm about it. Here's what they said:
"It is important to make clear, the Cartujano horse is a lineage WITHIN the Andalusian Horse (please check Spanish laws BOE-A-2018-749 and BOE-A-2019-2859).
Therefore the racial prototype is the same: www.ancce.es/tutorial-de-la-raza/english
Regarding the shape of the head, Cartujano lineage has never had concave profiles. The face of the Cartujanos have always been either straight or slightly convex.
[...]
Regarding the colors or coats of these horses in ancient times, please find enclosed a picture with the figures of the amount of horses that the monks had from 1747 to 1806, separated by colors.
This information has been taken from the official archive of historical documents of the city Jerez de la Frontera. www.revistadehistoriadejerez.com/revista-de-historia-de-jerez/volumen-11-12-2005-2006/
Number 11-12, 2005/2006, page 64.
The monks had horses registered with 6 different colors.
In fact in 1747 the 60% of what they had was brown and 32% black. Only a 5.5% was grey (white). These coats changed over the years and in 1806, the brown and black coats together were 52.5% and grey coat supposed 40.6%"
We hope these information are helpful for you. If you have any further question please let us know.
Best,
DW Euromaxx
@@dweuromaxx Thank you for explaining this and sharing this important information. Now, will you kindly send me a sample horse? I promise I will love it forever! a I’ll even let it share my bed! ❤️ 🇺🇸 liza
El caballo cartujano o andaluz es lo mismo.
@@dweuromaxx I must agree with everything you said. Especially the shape of the nose bridge. The oldest most authentic bloodlines have convexed faces that curve slightly outward. The exact opposite of the Arabian horse.
the andalisian is africane origine
its a mix betwen the arabe and barebare horse not a pure race when the arabe dominate spain the horse stay in spain
No, the andalusian is from Spain, they have Arab in they blood yes, but is because the arabs come with they horses
His pure Arabe
Andalusian horses are direct descendants of Iberian horses, that is, endemic to Spanish territory. We talk about horses with more than 20,000 years of history, on their backs and have a remote origin. Andalusian horses already existed at the end of the Neolithic period, when they began to be domesticated and ridden by warriors and nomadic tribes.
@@Ramoncandamo thats how they brainwashyou.
Wonderful horses