It's been around a long time. Probably as long as any horse with white around the eyes is crazy :) I don't think Appaloosas are really crazy, do you?
Every time I see them though I think of this poem and chuckle
No not really:), Altho....the first horse we ever bought that was "mine", was a Strawberry Roan, flaxen mane and tail, very very pretty and very well built. She didn't have papers, but I was told because of the white around her eyes, and the striped hoofs she probably had some Appy in her. I thought she was crazy:). Turns out, (I finally sent her to a trainer), she had never really been broke. I bought her from a dude ranch where she had been in a dude string. She just didn't know what to do without a horse in front of her. Being a beginner rider, I didn't know what to do with her. I sold her after the trainer told me she wasn't the horse for me, and bought my first Arab.
I wish I had a scanner, I'd post some pictures of her, she was really pretty:)
Becky
There's another one an old trail rider said about the number and placement of cowlicks on a horse's forehead.
Here it is... Hooey or phooey ;~D
Horse Facial Swirls
According to Linda Tellington-Jones, you can analyze your horse's personality based on his facial swirls and this is discussed in Linda-Tellington Jones' book, Getting in Touch: Understand and Influence Your Horse's Personality.
What are facial swirls? Facial swirls are kind of like the "cowlick" that humans have in the hair on their head -- which is a lock or tuft of hair growing in a different direction from the rest of the hair, usually in a circular pattern. Well, horses have them too, these "cowlick" swirls, but they have them somewhere on their face. And according to Linda Tellington-Jones (the founder of T-Touch), based on her research, you can assess a horse's personality based on the location of, and even number of, swirls you find there on the horse's face.
Linda talks about the swirls on horses' faces being like our fingerprints and, like fingerprints, no two are just alike, and some breed associations even use them as identification marks. Linda has studied facial swirls since 1965 and has found her assessments to hold true about 70% of the time. She says you have to look at other factors as well, such as ears, eyes, mouth, not just look at the swirls, to deduce personality traits. Sometimes, she says, other physical characteristics will override the swirl in character/personality assessment.
Linda describes several types of horse facial swirls and what they mean:
1. A single swirl between or above the horse's eye is the standard displayed by the majority of horses in her studies. This positioning indicates a horse with a generally uncomplicated nature, but there are variations. Swirls may be set to one side or the other. Swirls set to the left as you face the horse will tend to indicate a bit more complicated horse, but still trustworthy. Swirls set to the right may be less cooperative horses than those with center or to the left swirls. In general, swirls of this sort are less indicative of character than the more complex patterns.
2. A single swirl several inches below the eyes, Linda found 80% of horses with this feature are unusually imaginative and intelligent. They like to amuse themselves creatively like: turn on water, open stall doors, untying complicated knots ("locking picking" horses), find ways to escape pastures ("Horse Houdini's"), etc. These horses are usually of above average intelligence and are interesting characters to deal with.
3. A single long swirl that may be between the eyes, or extend below, indicates a horse who is friendly and particularly enjoys relating to people.
4. Two swirls adjoining, either one above the other, or side by side -- these can be above, between, or below the eyes and are sometimes set at an angle to each other: Horses with this tend to be more emotional and over-reactive than average. They tend to become upset without apparent reason, and at unexpected moments. When such horses blow up, the best way to handle them is to back off and allow them to settle. Punishing them doesn't help; in fact it usually only aggravates the behavior more and can even bring on more resistance. However, Linda says, a horse like this can be a great horse; she has had some of her best show horses with this configuration, but generally, horses with this pattern are not ideal for inexperience riders.
5. Three swirls close together on the forehead (not up under the forelock) is rare. In geldings and mares this indicates a complex individual but not an unpredictable one; stallions, however, with three swirls are another story -- about 80% of the stallions Linda has observed having this three-swirl marking have exhibited unreliable, often dangerous behavior.
Linda feels the best way to use facial swirls in analyzing horse personality is to evaluate them in conjuction with all other characteristics of the horse's head. The book this information is from is: