Breed Characteristics
Mustangs come in all sizes, shapes, colors and types of build. Average size is 14.2 hands but it is not uncommon to see one as short as 13 hands or as tall as 16 hands. The most common color seen is sorrel and bay, but any color is possible. The flashier colors such as Paints, Appaloosas, Palominos, Buckskins and black seem to have been bred out of the breed over the years, but again, it is not uncommon to see those colors.
Famous Horses
Nevada?s Miss TangTang was born in 1977 in Nevada. At the age of eight months she was adopted by Ellen Nelson of Sunnyvale, Texas. From that early start Tang has grown to be quite a celebrity in her own right. Tang represented the Mustang Horse at the BIG D CHARITY HORSE SHOW held in Texas. In 1992, Tang was featured in Car and Driver Magazine, “Mustang Horse vs. Mustang Car.” In 1997 Tang was honored with her own trading card. Aside from just representing the breed, Tang has also been busy on the show circuit. She has won a DAC (Distinguished Achievement Certificate) in Western Pleasure, English Pleasure and Trail. She is the first Mustang to win one DAC much less three. At age 20, Tang still continues to be shown and also to greet the public as a good-will Mustang at BLM adoptions, county fairs and anywhere else the public wants to see her.
Kentucky Horse Park Mustang Troop
The Kentucky Horse Park’s Education Department has 24 Mustangs, all from Wyoming, that were adopted through the Bureau of Land Management’s Adopt-A-Horse Program. These Mustangs are part of a cooperative effort between the Horse Park, the Lexington Police Activities League and BLM to give inner city Lexington youngsters the opportunity to become horsemen and women and to give wild horses a useful and productive future. The Kentucky Horse Park’s Mustang Troop Drill Team has made appearances in the 1997 Presidential Inaugural Parade, at EQUITANA USA in Louisville, Kentucky and the Kentucky Horse Fair.