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REYKJAVIK AND THE PONIES. 17 them seem like acquiring four active indefatigable legs of your °wn. So docile and intelligent are the good ones, that you be- come quite unaware of guiding, but go with a mere wish where you will. I always rode without my third pummel in Iceland, as it is more convenient for jumping on and off, and for lounging on the saddle at times during a long day’s journey ; and no Ice- land pony wishes to throw a comfortable rider. Among the very many I have ridden and come across, I have only found one vicious, and that was rather negative obstinacy than positive malice. Some, no doubt, are lazy, and most go better in com- pany than alone. Even the trotting ponies are generally smoother than ours, and keep their easy speed up over wonderfully rough ground ; and they are very surefooted and intelligent in finding their way over lava, or bogs, or in the night. I never presume to guide a willing pony in such places in detail, only giving him the route, and allowing him to carry it out as he thinks best; and it is probably owing to this that my ponies kept fresh, when sometimes their companions, who had been more interfered with, were exhausted. Such ponies need no riding in the technical sense ; all that is needed is the sympathy between horse and rider—the comprehension of equine feelings that even unprac- tised people may attain to. Yet I have heard and seen tourists abuse ponies which I have found on trial quite willing and easy- paced. Some tourists even tumble off such ponies, but for this they have small excuse. So far, I have been speaking of fair average riding-ponies, such as may be hired by the traveller for from one and a half to three krone a-day. But there are others which are seldom exported, because they command a price in Iceland that could hardly be got for them in England, owing to their small size—say £18 to £25. These generally belong to farmers or gentlemen, who take pride in them, feed them well during the winter, and do not hire them out. They are often very well shaped, and fine movers, with high crests and large quick eyes; the neck and chest much developed and broad; the legs fine, flat, and clean. Every movement is alert, every nerve quivering with B
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By fell and fjord or Scenes and studies in Iceland

Year
1882
Language
English
Pages
308


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