A beautiful Spring Day 2008

 

 

Pride's Youngstock  For Sale

2008 Youngstock

2006 Youngstock

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Pride's Producing and Champion Stock

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Farm & Family
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Welsh Mountain Pony Mares

 

Phil Baker

 Flo Baker

979-877-8957

979-203-8287

(2286 FM 1457, New Ulm, Texas 78950)

phillipbaker@texasbb.com 


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Tylwyth Bonnies Pride
Click  picture for pedigree

 

Primrose Farm is located in Shelby, Texas - Austin County (south central Texas), midway between Houston and Austin. Although relatively new to the industry our farm, established in 2003, has grown with the help of many knowledgeable friends.
 
 Our Welsh Mountain Pony herd began with the purchase of the exquisite brood mare, Tylwyth Bewitched, a Welsh pony with the finest bloodlines tracing immediately to foundation ponies such as Lithgow Houdini, Clan Glomadh, Coed Coch Madog, Clan Dana, and Liseter Brilliant. Our first goal is to maintain and propagate ponies to the breed standard of the Welsh Mountain (Section A) Pony.
 
Our ponies are bred to be loved and enjoyed by children and their parents, and are "Ponies born to love children". Their beauty and spirit are wonderful to watch, their kindness a pleasure to enjoy.

 

We have several excellent youngsters for sale, see them on Pride's Youngstock page. Please contact us for information.

                   
 

                                           

Ross and Dixie

Ross and Texana

Grace and Hannah

Grace

Ross

 
 
 

Some History

Two Criban Pledge (Criban Grey Grit x Criban Martha) sons have given the United States great performance ponies. Clan Marshall (out of Dinas Moonstone) was imported in 1955 by Merrie Mills Farm of Virginia. Clan Glomadh (out of Wentworth Glynda) was imported to the Texas Stud in 1955 also. Both of these ponies were out of Coed Coch Glyndwr daughters. Dinas Moonstone was one of the foundation mares of Twyford Stud. Wentworth Glynda was imported to this country as part of the initial importations of the Texas Stud. To quote WELSH PONY GAZETTE (August 1977), about Wentworth Glenda, "One of the truly influential mares in the Southwest as well as having left a legacy on the hoof in Great Britain, prior to export." Clan Glomadh produced top ponies for Texas Stud, Bristol Pony Farms and most recently Tylwyth Pony Farm and his get are spread throughout Texas and the United States. The 'Clan Glomadh Memorial Trophy' for Top Welsh Performance Pony was donated to AHSA by the Badger Family upon the recent death of Clan Glomadh at the age of 32.

Our goal is to take this bloodline into the future
where families can enjoy it's ponies and breeders can propagate the lines.

In the period around 8000BC Britain was physically attached to both Ireland and Europe and there was free migration of animals from Asia and Africa. It is likely that the Celtic pony took this route and established itself in Wales, Ireland(Connemara) and the Hebrides (Shetland). The large Bronze Age collection of fragments of harness and small (less than 3") bits found in North Wales, indicates that ponies were being used for harness work at that time. Certainly Welsh ponies were very much in evidence in Wales during the conquest of Julius Caesar (55-54BC) who wrote about their speed and docility as chariot horses and their activity as riding horses.

 The next mention of Welsh Ponies is in 1188A.D. when the Welsh Hills were reported to be "full of ponies". One theory is that much of the final type of the Welsh Pony and Cob was established at this stage through the influence of stallions brought back from the East by the Crusaders, but there is no firm evidence to confirm this.

 Welsh Ponies returned to prominence in 1535 when Henry VIII ordered the destruction of all horses under 13hh because they were too small to carry the weight of a knight in full armour and were eating valuable grazing. Fortunately the inaccessibility of the mountainous areas of Wales prevented this death sentence from being carried out on the Welsh ponies in that area and the law was later repealed by Queen Elizabeth I.

 The harsh climate and continual persecution, not only by Henry VIII, but also by the lowland farmers who drove the Welsh ponies back into the hills whenever they went in search of better grazing, led to the development of a very hardy Welsh pony with plenty of bone, a thick mane and tail and lots of feather. The ponies were of predominantly dark colors with blacks, browns and dark duns being proven the most hardy.

Founders of the Welsh Pony and Cob Society, recognizing the need to preserve the integrity of the bloodlines of Welsh Ponies and Cobs, Registry decided to exclude those animals with excessive white markings from purebred registration. This was an educated decision to discourage the propagation of Welsh carrying piebald and skewbald coloration and various other traits foreign to original Welsh Mountain Ponies. Those officers, concerned breeders themselves, decided that preserving the original Welsh standard was the Registry's priority, and registration and show rules were adopted which would best serve the preservation of the Welsh pony and cob breed.

Welsh ponies were imported by American breeders as early as the 1889s. George E. Brown of Aurora, Illinois, appears to have been one of the first real Welsh enthusiasts, importing a large number of animals between 1884 and 1910. Principally through his efforts and those of John Alexander, The Welsh Pony & Cob (the word "Cob" was dropped in 1946) Society of America was formed and certification for the establishment of a breed registry was issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture on July 30, 1907.

By 1913 a total of 574 Welsh ponies had been registered, and the owner-breeder list showed applications coming from Vermont, Ohio, Kentucky, Virginia, Texas, Oregon, Iowa, Massachusetts, New York City, and Canada. The popularity of the Welsh pony was spreading, and his great versatility was already becoming apparent, not only because he was adapting himself well to any geographical area, but because he was being put to many uses, both by children and adults.

It was the concern of early importers and breeders that a "purity of the breed" be maintained, and this subject was regularly discussed with Welsh and English breeders who had established their own registry in 1901.
Mr. Brown summarized his views in this way in a report to members of the American Society: "With a correct standard fixed and uniformly adhered to, nothing can block the advancement of Welsh ponies to front rank in their classes."

"......we shall look for the great bold eye, the tiny head, short back, strong quarters, high set of tail, fine hair, hocks that do not turn in, the laid-back shoulder, the straight foreleg, and the short, so very short, cannon bone."

One of the outstanding breeders of Welsh ponies has said: "The bigger the eye, the better; the deeper through the heart, the stronger the prouder the lift of the head, the more courageous; the swifter the action, the more fearless."

The pure Welsh pony may be any color: black, gray, bay, roan, cream, or chestnut. He can never be piebald or skewbald.

 

Drawing by our 11 year old grandaughter Grace

 
   

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