Wild Horses facts
While investigating facts about Wild Horses, I found out little known, but curios details like:
The 1st title of "Where the Wild Things Are" was "Where the Wild Horses Are" - until Sendak realized he could not draw a horse. So he drew the Wild Things, modeled after his relatives.
Maurice Sendak's classic book "Where the Wild Things Are" was supposed to be titled "Where the Wild Horses Are" but he realized he couldn't draw horses so he changed it to "things" instead
In my opinion, it is useful to put together a list of the most interesting details from trusted sources that I've come across. Here are 50 of the best facts about Wild Horses I managed to collect.
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Where the Wild Things Are" was originally going to be "Where the Wild Horses Are" until Maurice Sendak started working on it and discovered he couldn't draw horses
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"Where the Wild Things Are" was originally titled "Land of the Wild Horses" until the author Maurice Sendak realized that he couldn't draw horses and changed the name.
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A boat carrying horses for transportation that was shipwrecked, but the horses on it swam to a nearby island. The horses have since lost all domestication and the island has a population of more than 450 wild horses today
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Wild Bill Hickok once escaped being shot by waving his hand at onlookers behind a mounted gunman and yelling, "Don't shoot him in the back; he is drunk." The gunman wheeled his horse around, and before he realized he had been fooled, Hickok shot him through the temple.
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There are no such thing as true wild horses any more. The Western US has a population of free-roaming horses that are descendants of domesticated Colonial Spanish horses and are thus technically feral not wild.
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In the 1930s the Soviet Union attempted to domesticate wild moose. They believed moose might fare better in deep snow than horse cavalry so they began a breeding program. Though they never became cavalry animals, one of the breeding facilities, Kostroma Moose Farm, is still up and running.
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An underwater cave in southern France has >20,000 year old cave art on its walls, made when sea levels were lower. The art depicts Auks, Bison, wild horses, and more.
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The Przewalski's horse was long considered the last wild horse on Earth to never be domesticated at any point in history. However, a 2018 study found that they are actually descendants of domesticated horses owned by a long-extinct ancient civilization.
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Animal populations are growing in Chernobyl since humans left. Among them, a herd of Przewalski's horses, the only truly wild horse in the world, introduced in 1998.
What is true about wild horses?
You can easily fact check it by examining the linked well-known sources.
Maurice Sendak’s classic "Where The Wild Things Are" was originally titled "Where The Wild Horses Are" but Maurice realized he was unable to draw horses.
Wild horses no longer exist. Only feral. - source
The US government has an adoption program for wild horses and burros. - source
There is a 7 foot tall fence surrounding the entire park. This is meant to help keep the wild horses and bison in the park's boundaries. There are locations in the fence that permit other animals to pass through.
Animals such as pigs, horses, sheep, as well as many animals in the wild like to eat leaves and root of catsear.
Przewalski’s horse can survive up to 20 years in captivity and more than 20 years in the wild.
Alexander the Great tamed a wild horse, naming it Bucephala. He eventually named a city Bucaphala, after his horse.
The only surviving wild horse population, the Przewalski's horses from Mongolia, descends from just 13 individuals
The Asian Wild Horse is the only truly primitive breed that is still surviving in the world. This wild horse was discovered by Colonel Preswalski on the western edge of the Gobi desert in Mongolia in 1879 and has not changed much after the Ice Age
Native animals found living in Cotopaxi National Park include foxes, bears, pumas, wolves, wild horses, condors, and rabbits.
Wildlife viewing is one of the most popular visitor attractions. Animals that can be seen include bighorn sheep, white-tailed deer, wild horses, cougars, bison, coyotes, mule deer, elk, prairie dogs, wild turkeys, and sharp-tailed grouse.