In a video making the rounds on social media and TV news this week, a horse takes on an alligator at a Florida state park. The gator appears to be minding his own business, but the horse decides the gator is too close to her herd—which includes a couple of foals—as they graze on the tall vegetation.
Krystal Berry, one of the visitors who caught the altercation on video, reported the incident to park officials and asked them to check on the animals. They told her that there were no signs of injury.
Why is there a herd of horses wandering around the trails of Paynes Prairie State Park, near the city of Gainesville? According to Friends of Paynes Prairie, these are Florida Cracker Horses, descendants of horses brought over by Spanish explorers centuries ago. The Cracker Horse was designated Florida’s official state horse in 2008.
The horses were reintroduced to the park in 1985 to represent a part of the area’s heritage. The horses are feral and are “minimally managed,” with veterinary intervention only occurring when park managers see signs of illness or injury.
Population management is key, however, to maintain the herd population at a number that won’t overtax the available grazing or lead to horses expanding their range outside of the park and into developed areas. The Paynes Prairie Livestock Management Plan of 2011 recommends gelding or removing colts and stallions and using outside Cracker stallions to breed mares at the park’s Hickory Ranch to maintain the population. The herd size typically ranges from 10 to 30 animals.
Outside of this small feral herd, Florida Cracker Horses are used for pleasure riding and competition with their ranching heritage making them especially suited to working cattle. According to the Florida Cracker Horse Association, the horses typically range between 13.2 and 15.2 hands and perform various gaits, including running walk, trot, and ambling gaits.
The park is also home to roaming bison and a herd of reintroduced Florida Cracker cattle, which are listed as “critical” on the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy Conservation Priority List. The livestock are maintained at the park, which was a vast cattle ranch in the early days of the Spanish colonial period in Florida’s history.
Leslie Potter is a writer and photographer based in Lexington, Kentucky. www.lesliepotterphoto.com
Saw this on FB, just happy to hear that the mare’s leg is okay! She’s just protecting her herd and her foal you can see in the video!
Prayers the mare is okay! I’m all for her protecting her baby that you see there! Looks like a yearling and maybe a weanling laying down!
OMG, momma horse is really a fierce fighter for her babies! Hope the horse is okay!
WHOA, that’s one protective mom over her baby! Hope she’s okay, looks like he might have gotten her in the leg!
just goes to say don’t mess with momma
Never mess with a mare! She’s gonna get ya! Stay away from my babies!
Oh wow, sure hope that the mare is okay, looks like the gator got her in the hind leg!
Oh No, looks like she might have gotten bitten on the right front! Sure hope not!