Posted in Instructors, Trainers and Clinicians, Marsh Tacky, See a Marsh Tacky Horse

Daufuskie Marsh Tacky Society expands

short and sweet post…

Check out this story by Caitlin Turner at the Island Packet about the Daufuskie Marsh Tacky Society!!

Critically endangered Marsh Tacky horses on Daufuskie could get new Beaufort County home

Erika Veit brought the State Heritage Horse, the Marsh Tacky, back to Daufuskie Island. Since then she has weathered hurricanes on the island, had barges bring more Marsh Tacky Horses for the Beach Races and provided a unique look into Daufuskies’ Island history. The Daufuskie Marsh Tacky Society is growing, expanding to a farm on the mainland of South Carolina in Beaufort County.

The DTMS is hiring interns, students and employees – if its your dream job to work with the Marsh Tacky Horses check out their application page.

Posted in Artists, Activists and Historians, Equine Business, History of the Marsh Tacky, See a Marsh Tacky Horse

The Divine Horse invited me to present Beach Race Champion, A Marsh Tacky Tale on Saturday October 6 to help celebrate Literacy!!!

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Completely last minute invite to The Divine Horse  on Saturday! I absolutely love being able to attend local events to promote the SC State Heritage Horse. It’s been a few years since I have been out to the elementary schools in York County. I met so many wonderful people on Saturday and enjoyed conversing about one of the best kept secrets of South Carolina, the Marsh Tacky Horse.

A great big Thank You to divinehorse

The Divine Horse is currently carrying the Beach Race Champion, A Marsh Tacky Tale. Please stop by for your copy.

Please purchase books through this Amazon link and help us be able to get to more schools.

Saving the Marsh Tacky Horse through education, one book at a time.

Marsh Tacky Tales is working towards a few other books, working titles are Mariah, and The Colonels Little Tacky and a few more. Our original joint research has discovered incredibly rich stories about these unique horses from the Low-country to the Piedmont and Foothills of South Carolina and we are excited to share them!

(c) Marsh Tacky Tales 2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in History of the Marsh Tacky

Marsh Tacky Tales – Updates

Good Day to all of you who are Marsh Tacky Fans!

We are diligently working on the book, The Natural History of the Marsh Tacky; from Colonial Horse to State Treasure. This book has been researched since 2007 and we are excited to be coming to the close of research and on to the next step of writing, editing and finally publishing. Our upcoming book features interviews, folklore, science and original documented research.

Update to the childrens books – I am in talks with some artists and looking into publishers for a new  non-fiction historical series of books based on our research. As always, your purchase of “Beach Race Champion” helps support our endeavors to educate the children of South  Carolina about the Marsh Tacky Horse, the South Carolina State Heritage horse.

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The Marsh Tacky is a rich source of history for the Carolinas and beyond. I encourage you to continue monitoring this blog as we will be featuring artists who have created works pertaining to the history of the Marsh Tacky.

The Blog may be undergoing a bit of Rebranding and updating, so please be patient!

© 2018 Marsh Tacky Tales

 

 

Posted in See a Marsh Tacky Horse

Flash, A Horse in Need

I have a confession. I stopped blogging thinking maybe someone had taken the blog information and stolen Yago and River. I have been struggling with whether or not to continue to blog about Marsh Tacky Horses. Yesterday I was alerted to a horse that was claimed to be a Marsh Tacky per coggins and is headed to the New Holland sale on Monday July 3, 2017. Some of you will read this blog after everything is all over and I apologize for that. I had hoped this horse was Yago or River. It is not. I’ve learned something though, I learned that everyone of you have been looking for Yago & River. And I want you to keep looking. And I also need help for this horse:

This horse is going to the NEW HOLLAND PA sale on Monday July 3, 2017New Holland Bound Horse, Head Unconfirmed Marsh Tacky

“…he’s really afraid. He doesn’t know what’s happening, it’s obviously his first time experiencing something like this. At the first sale, he pulled back and broke 2 halters. They put him in a pen with a mare about his size. She was meant and kicked him. He wants to shut down, I can tell, but he still responds to a kind, gentle touch and soft voice. Obviously was a woman’s horse. He’s going to need QT and tlc if he gets out of there!” 

This is the link to the GoFundMe 

This is the Information posted on FB about this horse

New Holland Bound Horse, Unconfirmed Marsh Tacky

Posting Copied from Horses of New Holland – Before FB page.

“Rare opportunity to own and endangered breed. Very few of these horses remain. MARSH TACKY (per coggins, has the breed characteristics) Official horse for the state of SC. Purchased 1-2 years ago at the annual sale.
Gelding. 3 yrs old. 14hh. Halter broke only. This is not Yago, one of the two Marsh Tacky horses stolen a few months ago.
Selling tomorrow morning at 9am auction in New Holland, Pa. Mel’s Sales Stable. Attend in person if possible. Phone bidding is available. Video available via PM or see main page.”

He is a 3 y.o. with no papers, his coggins says he is a Marsh Tacky. The clinic that performed the Coggins is familiar with the breed and has treated many Marsh Tacky Horses over the years. He looks like a classic Marsh Tacky according to the standards provided by the Carolina Marsh Tacky Association.

Please look at the pictures showing his conformation. No conclusive factual data has been provided to negate his breed claim.

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I want to thank Horses of New Holland – Before FB page for alerting us to this horse.

I would like to thank everyone that is still looking for Yago & River. We will bring you home!

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Posted in History of the Marsh Tacky

An update on the “Carolina Marsh Tacky: From Colonial Horse to State Treasure”, McFadden & Stafford

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Caden astride Molly, led by Jodie Reeves, for the South Carolina Horsemans Council  booth at the Fort Mill Festival

*Update: 6/14/2018

Remember last years goal? We didn’t make the deadline…we made more discoveries! We hope you are encouraged that there is much more known about the Marsh Tacky than before. We are working hard at getting the manuscript completed and soon to be in your hands!

 

Over a decade ago my co-conspirator and library supervisor, Jackie McFadden told me not to roll a particular bookcart back to the stacks for re-shelving. This time we were going to commit and complete a manuscript on a chosen topic. It was 2006. Jackie McFadden had found the bill for the Marsh Tacky horse  in the SC legislature. The bill passed in 2010, but we haven’t completed the book yet – it is still a work in progress . We hope to complete it this year.

Little did we know that bookcart would soon turn into small libraries in  each of our homes, multiple plastic containers filled with interviews, newspaper clippings, a small grant for interviews, but still no book. We would visit the coastal side of South Carolina to wake up in nearly hurricane-like conditions to meet horses and their owners in gusty winds and hard rain. We listened to the old-timers, we pulled hair for DNA samples in that weather on Johns Island. We met Molly and her person, Janson Cox  who generously allowed Jackie McFadden to pull Molly’s mane hair for DNA testing.Of course, he mentioned he didn’t want Molly mad at him for the hair pulling!

I met the owner of the horse I would own a decade later. Jackie McFadden eventually became a board member of the newly founded Carolina Marsh Tacky Association. And nothing slowed down long enough for us to write more than a few notes that lead to more research. There was always another interview, another mystery horse, another test result or another stash of historical papers uncovered. There were always things we could do for CMTA such as make informative brochures, design t-shirts or even give talks on the Marsh Tacky Horse.

Marsh Tacky horse owners traveled hours to come to events across the state to show people this amazing little horse that was such a lowcountry secret it was almost extinct. They didn’t ask for money to travel, they did it on their own dime.That is how much they believe in this little horse. They believed it needed to be the South Carolina State Heritage Horse.

We have been graciously invited to and/or received to places such as Ketchen Place Farm, Carolina Fresh Farms in Rock Hill, SC, Sparkleberry Fair, Old McCaskills FarmThe Bagel BoatCharleston County Library, and schools from Kershaw County, York County, and Chester Counties. Apologies to those I may have left out. (Send me a note and we’ll do another blog post on where we’ve been!)

Meanwhile the state bill loomed over our office, rejected time and again, countless re-writes and modifications. Four years later in 2010, (and who knows how many miles on rental cars or personal vehicles!) Jackie McFadden met with Governor Sanford of South Carolina along with other Marsh Tacky Breeders and enthusiasts when he signed the “South Carolina State Heritage Horse”, the Marsh Tacky, bill into law. Without a single cent to taxpayers! The “South Carolina State Heritage Horse” was finally one of our state symbols! DP Lowther, one of the breeders with the longest unbroken history in Marsh Tacky horses, asked Jackie McFadden to come pick out a horse.  She did, and named her Little Miss River.

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The Marsh Tacky horse is DP, a stud owned by David Grant and named in honor of DP Lowther.

As researchers, every nugget of information we found turned into another question about the Marsh Tacky. The most important one however was “How will anyone know we have a State Heritage Horse?” Truly a grassroots program began in education – a volunteer with a horse (Janson Cox), a volunteer with a camera (Jackie McFadden), and a volunteer with a notepad(me) got together and dubbed ourselves, “Team Molly”in 2010 at the second annual Carolina Marsh Tacky Association beach race. It was three years later and the official studbook had closed, the bill had passed and over 3,000 visitors were expected to see the race.

Team Molly
Original 2010 Team Molly badge

Molly sized up the competition that year and did not take home the trophy. The next year 2011, Molly showed the young horses how it was done, however. If she could rock the Marsh Tacky world being the oldest horse on the beach and out-run stallions, we had some more work to do.  We pulled together a self-published book, “Beach Race Champion” and got to work. Molly the oldest horse in the race had the youngest rider!

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We visited schools, historical sites, events, festivals,4-H clubs, businesses. The book sales provided some gas money to haul a horse on occasion but we still filled up our tanks and got our meals on the road. Molly’s jockey, Brittany would visit the schools and talk about riding a beach race horse whenever she could.

We soon realized one horse, even if it was the magnificent Molly, coSC Festival (57)-Suld not possibly cover the entire state of South Carolina. So we reached out to owners who cared about educating our state about its new  South Carolina State Heritage Horse, the Marsh Tacky. And they did, they traveled wherever there was a need to have a horse so people would know about them. And they still do.

Over the past ten years we have been collecting oral histories, family histories and stories, getting to know owners new and old and relentlessly searching for what one of our interviewees called “a paper clip, you are searching for something everyone had and they forgot they had it”. We hope to complete more childrens books about Molly once our “Natural History of the Marsh Tacky” is complete.

I would like to take a moment to thank some of the horses for the visits:

Molly, a mystery mare Marsh Tacky, who pretty much owns Janson Cox and reminds him that all Calvary cannons will go uphill in any weather, despite the riders discomfort. She is also a Daughter of the American Revolution and Calvary mount.She has been in educational documentaries about the Revolutionary War. 868

 

 

 

 

 

Gator, a shiny grulla Marsh Tacky Stud, owned by Jim & Kim Brown, have graciously  showed up at my own local school district in Clover, SC as well as in schools in Chester, SC with the toughest group of teenagers.Eventually Gators good-natured attitude persisted until the teens could not resist petting Gator. Then it was ‘Totally Awesome’ to pet Gator. Gator has also been in documentaries about the SC state Heritage horse. 0426130710