Brumby
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This article is about the horse; for the rugby team, see Brumbies Rugby.
A brumby is a free-roaming feral horse in Australia. Although they are found in many areas around the country, the most well-known brumbies are found in the Australian Alps region in south-eastern Australia. Today, the majority of them live in the Northern Territory, with the second largest population in Queensland. There are more horses in the wild in Australia than any other country. It is similar to the American mustang. A group of brumbies is known as a mob, and also as a band.
Brumbies are the descendants of escaped or lost horses belonging to the area's European settlers. The first horses imported to the Australian continent were "Capers" that arrived from South Africa and after that there was a shipment of Chilean Horses. Later there were introductions of Timor Ponies from Indonesia, British pony breeds, various British draft horse breeds and a strong influence of Thoroughbreds and Arabs. With time this mixture contributed to the growing number of feral horses running wild in Australia. Occasionally they are mustered and domesticated for use as working "stock" horses on farms, rounding up and droving sheep, cattle and other livestock.
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[edit] Origin of the term
The name brumby comes from the horses left behind by Sergeant James Brumby from his property at Mulgrave Place in New South Wales, when he left for Tasmania in 1804. The name may also have come from an Aboriginal word "baroomby" meaning wild in the language of the Pitjara people on the Warrego and Nogoa Rivers in southern Queensland. Banjo Paterson said in the introduction for his poem Brumby's Run published in the Bulletin in 1894 that Brumby was the word for free-roaming horses. A letter in 1896 to the Sydney Morning Herald also says that baroombie is the word for horse among the Aboriginal people of the Balonne, Nebine, Warrego and Bulloo rivers.
Another explanation is that the name comes from Baramba, which was the name of a creek and station in the Queensland district of Burnett, which had been established in the 1840s, and later abandoned, leaving many of the horses to escape into the wild. It has also been suggested that the name comes from the Irish word bromach or bromaigh.
The first recorded use of the term was from the Australasian magazine from Melbourne in 1880, which said that brumbies were the bush name in Queensland for 'wild' horses. In 1885 the Once a Month magazine suggested that brumbies was a New South Wales term.
[edit] Culling
There is controversy over removal of brumbies from National Parks, with horse lovers and animal rights advocates seeking to avoid inhumane culling techniques and attempting to organise relocation of the animals instead. However, it has been argued that relocation, which often involves hours of helicopter mustering, would be more traumatic for the horses. The primary reason for the brumbies' removal is that they are incompatible with fragile ecosystems and damage and destroy native flora which may be endangered. Between 22 October and 24 October, 2000, more than 600 wild horses were killed in the Guy Fawkes River National Park by the National Parks and Wildlife Service, many shot from helicopters. [1]
Brumbies are often sold into the European horse meat market after their capture.
[edit] Usage in popular culture
Brumbies are mentioned in Banjo Paterson's poem The Man From Snowy River as well as being seen in the films The Man From Snowy River and Return to Snowy River, The Man From Snowy River (TV series) and The Man From Snowy River: Arena Spectacular (which were all based on the poem).
The popular Silver Brumby books by Elyne Mitchell, written for children and young adults, describe the adventures of Thowra, a palomino brumby stallion in the Australian Alps. These stories were dramatised and made into a movie titled The Silver Brumby (also known as The Silver Stallion: King of the Wild Brumbies), starring Russell Crowe and Caroline Goodall.
The Canberra rugby union team, the CA Brumbies is named after the horse.
Brumbys is also the name of a chain of bakeries located throughout Australia, particularly in Queensland and Victoria.