
Man started taming horses about 5000 years ago. At the time the familiar modern type had not yet developed: it is the result of millennia of human involvement. Of the few original variants of the original species, a descendant still survives: a population of about 1500 horses live wild, free & untamed on the Dzungarian steppes of deep Central Asia. This Mongolian horse is the only true subspecies of wild horse remaining on Earth: others, more or less lucky survivors that we meet in Asia, in South America & in North America, are masterless or undomesticated horses of modern stock living in the wild. Nonetheless, both populations are symbols of freedom, universal testimonials of the pleasure of running wild; they are exhilarating beauty of unharnessed movement. A small band of dedicated, specialist photographers have for many years tracked wild horses in the farthest reaches of the world, observing & photographing them. They have taken pictures of great beauty that portray horses of the unbound prairies, grazing, galloping, clashing & mating, driven by instinct & unrestrained by the hand of man. This book is a tribute to humankind's most valued friend, free at last to be the wonderful
- & even occasionally wild
- creature that millions of years of evolution have created.