Randy Olson, Melissa Farlow Photography

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
409 images found

Loading ()...

  • A pair of Mongolian wild horses, also known as Przewalski horses, are a breed that has never been domesticated.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737070.jpg
  • Horses line the ridge at dusk at Return to Freedom Wild Horse Sanctuary.  Most of the 400 horses arrived in rescue efforts.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737093.jpg
  • Two curious burros watch mustangs drink at a waterhole they share. Burro is the Spanish name for a wild donkey. They have longer ears than horses and engaging personalities liking humans. <br />
The Bureau of Land Management created the Wild Horse and Burro Program to implement the Wild-Free Roaming Horses and Burros Act, passed by Congress in 1971. Broadly, the law declares wild horses and burros to be "living symbols of the historic and pioneer spirit of the West" and stipulates that the BLM and the U.S. Forest Service have the responsibility to manage and protect herds in their respective jurisdictions within areas where wild horses and burros were found roaming in 1971.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222856.jpg
  • Dirt flies up as horses gallop down the track in front of the twin spires of Churchill Downs. Horses are competing for a million dollar purse and a place in history.  First held in 1875, the Kentucky Derby is one of THE most famous two minutes in thoroughbred racing.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720960.TIF
  • A blue-eyed mustang mare is a descendant of horses bred in the Nevada's Sheldon Range. The horses were used as mounts for cavalry, and in later years, shipped to Europe to serve as war horses during WWI and WWII.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222881.jpg
  • Mustangs gallop in a tight pack as hired contractors herd large numbers of horses into a trap chasing them with helicopters. Nearly panicked, they are tricked to follow a tame “Judas” horse let loose in the confusion. The trained horse runs along the jute fence and into a corral expecting food and the wild horses that follow are captured.<br />
The Jackson Mountain Herd consists of mostly brown and dun colored horses. Most were dehydrated and hungry from drought conditions on Bureau of Land Management public lands in Nevada.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1200573.TIF
  • Strong winds blow rain from a storm cloud that violently erupts with loud claps of thunder that sends a band of horses running for safety. The young foal runs behind, following her mother and another mare.<br />
The wild horse herd nervously watched as a storm approached in central South Dakota. When lightning and thunder began, they galloped to a far away fence where they could go no further. The "fight or flight" instinct of behavior is powerful and horses often panic and flee when they sense danger.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222812.TIF
  • Two mustangs groom each other, a common social behavior among wild horses. The mutual grooming brings heads together and reaffirms bonding between horses, reducing social tension within a herd.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222797.jpg
  • Horses break from the starting gate at Churchill Downs race track. The two minute Kentucky Derby race is run on dirt as horses jockey for position on the stretch to the first turn.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720964-1.JPG
  • Wild horses gallop across Wyoming's Red Desert in the area of Honeycomb Buttes. The arid high desert located along the rim of the Great Divide Basin is colorful from deposits left by an ancient lake. The desolate wilderness area has sparse vegetation but horses spotted while on an aerial landscape shoot share the region with pronghorn deer and a rare desert elk.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM6659_680963-3.JPG
  • Wild stallions square off at a watering hole as other horses drink. Horses come to drink in a hierarchy, so these two mustangs are competing for dominance as water becomes more scarce for wildlife.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM6659_705725.jpg
  • A room full of 1,000-pound patients receiving surgery at famed Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital.  The facility is respected throughout the world for innovative and skilled treatment for horses including surgery, internal medicine, advanced diagnostic imaging, a specialized Podiatry Center and specialized Reproductive Center. Thoroughbred horses are like high-powered human athletes and sustain repairable injuries that can keep them racing.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720971-2.JPG
  • Przewalski horses descend from 13 that were captured around 1900.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737069.jpg
  • Prison inmates ride wild horses at the Warm Springs Correctional Center creating a dusty, chaotic scene. They are training the mustangs to handle stress and to follow the riders directions in all situations. The horses are auctioned off to the public at the end of the training program. Wardens explain that the men and horses must learn to trust one another.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222901.TIF
  • Wild horses create a cloud of dust as they gallop making trails across dry, sagebrush-covered public lands. Trails mark paths the horses follow in their trek through the barren desert of the Bureau of Land Management's Jackson Mountains searching for water and food.<br />
Nearly half the wild horses in the U.S. live in Nevada where they compete for food, water and territory with cattle, other wildlife, and oil gas and mineral exploration. Drought and wild land fire place greater pressures on the scrappy herd that survives on little to nothing in the Winnemucca rangeland.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1200521.jpg
  • A young horse trainer hangs out with rescued horses on the family ranch.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737121.jpg
  • A large field of Thoroughbred horses gallop in tight formation down the stretch to the first turn in the Kentucky Derby. Running on a dirt track, this two minute horse race is one most famous in the world.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_737658-1.JPG
  • A large field of Thoroughbred horses gallop in tight formation down the stretch into the first turn in the Kentucky Derby. Run on a dirt track, this two minute horse race is one most famous in the world.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_737658.jpg
  • An ancient Moai statue and wild horses on Rano Raraku crater. Moai toppled along the road were left as rubble.Their eyes are not completed until they standing upright.<br />
A small herd of wild horses, introduced from Tahiti by Catholic missionaries in the 19th-century, trek across Easter Island.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493936.JPG
  • Yearlings stand in a pasture surrounded by white fences and a historic Thoroughbred horse farm. Located in the heart of the Bluegrass, next to Keeneland Race Track, Manchester Farm holds the distinction as one of the most recognizable farms in Kentucky. What makes Kentucky special is that it is geologically favored for horses. Millions of years ago, layers of shells were buried and the crushed limestone makes the grass rich in calcium. As the land sinks, hills and valley are formed which make a perfect terrain for building strong muscles when horses run.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720968-2.JPG
  • Wild horses wade in a waterhole to drink and cool off on a summer evening in the Wild Horse Sanctuary.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222911.jpg
  • Wild horses follow the leader to a water hole to drink in order of hierarchy in the herd.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222857.jpg
  • A cloud of dust rises as two helicopters guide 870 mustangs across the desert into a trap. They were rounded up from the Winnemucca Rangeland Area after the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) determined that the number of wild horses there could not be supported on public land. Drought and wild fires created a dire situation for the horses, but advocates of mustangs believe horse herds are systematically being eliminated from western lands.<br />
Although there were as many as two million mustangs at the turn of the century, their numbers are much smaller and reduced regularly by these BLM gathers.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222849.TIF
  • Wild horses stand opposite ways to flick flies off each others faces with their tails.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222794.jpg
  • Hiding behind a jute fence, a cowboy watches as a helicopter drives wild horses into a trap. A “Judas” horse that is trained to run into a corral dupes the frightened horses into following. A gate slams shut and they are captured in a Bureau of Land Management roundup.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1200523.TIF
  • A young horse trainer relaxes with rescued horses on the family ranch.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737120.jpg
  • Protected wild horses come to a water hole drinking in order of dominance in the herd. Ears perked forward, the curious mustang shows no fear.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222855.TIF
  • Horses graze on green hills at Return to Freedom Wild Horse Sanctuary.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737092.jpg
  • Horses graze on steep slopes at a non-profit Return to Freedom Wild Horse Sanctuary.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737091.jpg
  • A young trainer calms a wild horse she is training, one of 50 unwanted wild horses she has adopted.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737134.jpg
  • A young horse approaches a trainer looking for attention. The teen and her mother have adopted 50 unwanted wild horses and train many of them for riding and competitions.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737132.jpg
  • A friendly horse reaches out to pull one of the twin sisters braid. The girls are passionate to save wild horses.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737127.jpg
  • A horse trainer rides bareback on the ranch where she and her mother adopted 50 unwanted wild horses.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737111.jpg
  • Mother helps her daughter onto a horse to ride bareback. They adopted 50 wild horses and train them.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737109.jpg
  • Wild horses are gentled and trained by prison inmates at the Warm Springs Correctional Center. After several weeks of handling, the horses are auctioned off to the public.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222912.TIF
  • Palomino Valley houses wild horses captured on public lands that are processed and prepared for adoption. A Bureau of Land Management facility in Nevada, mustangs trucked there are fed hay, vaccinated, given a freeze-mark brand and placed in corrals where they wait to be adopted or moved to another facility making room for more captured horses. There is little to no shelter from the sun in the barren facility.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222860.TIF
  • A helicopter circles back to drive a herd of wild horses across the desert toward a trap in a roundup by the Bureau of Land Management in Nevada. Dust rises as the panicked horses flee the buzzing noise above them. Drought and wild land fire create stressful conditions with little water and food available for the herd.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222850.jpg
  • Horses flee from helicopters in a Bureau of Land Management mustang roundup. Bands stay together to protect the younger wild horses as the herd gallops full speed trying to run to safety.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222846.jpg
  • Wild horses graze at dusk as the moon rises over a ranch in land in South Dakota where mustangs and burros are protected.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222785.jpg
  • A young horse trainer gets a surprise buss from one of the 50 wild horses that she and her mother have adopted and train.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737131.jpg
  • Two women horse trainers ride near their ranch where they adopted 50 unwanted, wild horses.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737112.jpg
  • A BLM Salt Lake Wild Horse and Burro Specialist checks her air rifle as she approaches a herd of wild horses to dart with PZP immunocontraception.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737085.jpg
  • Wild horses pace back and forth in temporary holding facility corrals adjusting to fences after wild horse round up.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737076.jpg
  • Bureau of Land Management contractors use a helicopter to push wild horses toward a trap during a roundup. Wyoming has "checkerboard" ownership of public land abutting private ownership. Ranchers won a lawsuit to have mustangs removed because they cross unfenced lines while grazing and searching for water.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222908.jpg
  • Prison inmates gentle wild horses at the Warm Springs Correctional Center. Many of the men bond with the horses they train and mutual trust is formed.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222902.jpg
  • Prison inmates train wild horses and ride them under the watchful eye of a corrections officer in a program run by Wyoming's Warm Springs Correctional Center. Inmates bond with the horses but they are auctioned off to the public after they are handled which makes them more adoptable.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222859.jpg
  • Wild horses kick up dust as they gallop through the dry Nevada desert. Horses survive on little living on barren public lands in the American West.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222853.jpg
  • Lured by vegetation, wild horses wander through subdivision yards in the Virginia Highlands.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222842.jpg
  • Wild horses are in a corral at Palomino Valley, a Bureau of Land Management holding facility.  After wild horses are rounded up, they are trucked and processed here then cared for until adopted or moved to other secured properties paid for by the federal government.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222838.jpg
  • A bachelor band of wild horses stick together to face into the wind picking up scents. Older studs join younger ones forming a family when none have mares or are accepted into another group.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222828.jpg
  • Wild horses exhibit a "fight or flight" instinct typical of prey animals. As a noise startles the band, the horse on the right flees, the middle one quickly turns to follow while the mustang on the left looks back to see the threat and why the alarm was sounded for them to run to safety.<br />
<br />
South Steens wild horse herd located south of Frenchglen in the high desert country with extremely rocky surfaces divided by deep canyons, rim rocks and plateaus.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1200575.TIF
  • A small herd of wild horses, brought by Catholic missionaries in the 19th-century from Tahiti, cross the main road through the island to graze.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1494001-1.JPG
  • A small breed of wild horses, brought over from Tahiti, graze on Easter Island.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493942.JPG
  • A small herd of wild horses, brought to Easter Island from Tahiti by Catholic missionaries in the 19th-century, graze on the island near the quarry.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1494001.JPG
  • A small herd of wild horses, introduced from Tahiti by Catholic missionaries in the 19th-century, trek across Easter Island.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493946-1.JPG
  • A curious Kiger mustang band of wild horses noted for their intelligence and stamina.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737066.jpg
  • Bureau of Land Management contractors drive wild horses galloping toward a trap using helicopters. Wyoming rangelands have "checkerboard" ownership of adjoining public and private land complicating management of wild horse herds. Ranchers won a lawsuit to have them rounded up and removed.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222844.jpg
  • A herd of wild horses gallops across the dry Nevada range chased by a helicopter during a Bureau of Land Management roundup. Mustang herds are federally protected, but their numbers are regulated creating conflict. Darn browns and black are typical colors in wild horse herds.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM6659_705670.jpg
  • A small herd of wild horses approaches with curiosity in the high desert West on public lands.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737059.jpg
  • A small herd of wild horses, introduced from Tahiti by Catholic missionaries in the 19th-century, trek across Easter Island.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493946.JPG
  • Cattle share land grazing with wild horses throughout the West.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737065.jpg
  • Wild horses graze while ducks swim by in a waterhole they share with other wildlife.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737063.jpg
  • Sand Wash Basin wild horses drink water on parched high desert public lands where they roam.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737062.jpg
  • Wild horses graze in a remote area of  high desert on western public lands.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737061.jpg
  • A small band of wild horses trots to join a herd as they graze in the high desert of western public lands.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737060.jpg
  • A band of wild horses drink from a Cold Creek pond in the parched desert.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737055.jpg
  • A band of wild horses roam the wide open spaces on Bureau of Land Management rangeland near Pilot Butte in western Wyoming.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222847.jpg
  • A band of wild horses follow single file to water as they roam the wide open spaces near Pilot Butte a unique formation that stands out in the high desert on public lands in western Wyoming.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222845.TIF
  • Panicked wild horses flee from a helicopter in a roundup. The Bureau of Land Management hires contractors annually to reduce herd numbers throughout the West.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222843.jpg
  • Separated from the herd, wild horses run to safety as Bureau of Land Management contractors bear down driving mustangs toward a trap using a helicopter for the roundup.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222835.jpg
  • Wild horses graze at an abandoned industrial site near a waterhole in Nevada. The scrappy equine are survivors on sparse, dry range as they roam across state, private and public federal land.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222834.TIF
  • A ranch hand opens a chute to load wild horses into a truck transporting them to a holding facility after a round up.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737089.jpg
  • Rounded up wild horses pace in holding facility corrals before they are transported where some are adopted.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737077.jpg
  • Frightened wild horses are corralled before transported to BLM holding facility.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737075.jpg
  • Dust settles as wild horses come to a halt, trapped after running from a helicopter during a Bureau of Land Management roundup. Drought and wild land fire created stressful conditions for the rugged, wily and skinny equine who barely survived eating twigs and dried up grasses.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222851.TIF
  • Helicopter hovers over a herd of wild horses during a roundup on public land.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737072.jpg
  • Calumet Farm's mares and foals graze in the Bluegrass region of Kentucky. Successful thoroughbred race horses are so important to the culture that each farm has a cemetery honoring their Thoroughbred champions.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720974-2.JPG
  • A boy bounces a soccer ball of his head while playing on a field near a large statue of a man with two horses.
    RANDY OLSON_MM6689_702588_4.TIF
  • A man and boy dressed in cowboy hat, jeans and button down shirts, balance while standing on top of horses at the Beef Empire Days rodeo event.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8429_2481162.JPG
  • A boy bounces a soccer ball of his head while playing on a field near a large statue of a man with two horses.
    RANDY OLSON_MM6879_708746.TIF
  • Wild horses graze on Newfoundland's rocky coast.
    RANDY OLSON_06450_654334.JPG
  • A cowboy competes with his newly-trained wild horse in the Extreme Mustang Makeover. Thirty trainers were given unhandled young Bureau of Land Management horses and thirty days to prepare. Judges scored them on how well the horses performed certain tasks and an open program to show off more talents. Horses were auctioned off to the public following the event which featured mustangs strengths and trainability.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222895.jpg
  • Kitty learned to train horses from her grandfather and now, she works with mustangs and difficult horses on her western ranch. Her daughter rides one of the many wild horses she has tamed and trained.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222915.jpg
  • Some prized horses live a pampered life in retirement and command large amount of money for breeding rights in the hopes they’ll pass on the best qualities of their bloodline. An Irish farm, Ashford Stud which is part of international horse racing business Coolmore, was built in recent years and features stone barns and bridges creating the charm of an earlier era. Stalls are filled with plush straw for bedding under chandeliers that shine in the cupolas.  <br />
Past Kentucky Derby winner Thunder Gulch's stud fees are as high as $125,000 per mating. A farm worker leads the stallion to a breeding barn.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720965.TIF
  • Thoroughbred horse auction at Fasig-Tipton, the oldest auction house in the United States. Horses are most often sold at public auction like this two-year old sale where horses often go for six figures—a bid spotter searches the crowd while a video showing the horse sprinting on the track along with the time is show on monitors above.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720972.jpg
  • Prepping a 1,000-pound patient , assistants work together fore a thoroughbred horse goes into surgery at famed Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital.  The facility is respected throughout the world for innovative and skilled treatment for horses including surgery, internal medicine, advanced diagnostic imaging, a specialized Podiatry Center and specialized Reproductive Center. Thoroughbred horses are like high-powered human athletes and sustain repairable injuries that can keep them racing.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720971-1.JPG
  • Caretakers and surgeons wait in a recovery area with a 1,000-pound patient after he is moved into a mat. The thoroughbred received surgery at famed Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital which is respected throughout the world. They are known for innovative and skilled treatment for horses including surgery, internal medicine, advanced diagnostic imaging, a specialized Podiatry Center and specialized Reproductive Center. Thoroughbred horses are like high-powered human athletes and sustain repairable injuries that can keep them racing.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720971-4.JPG
  • Some prized horses live a pampered life in retirement and command large amount of money for breeding rights in the hopes they’ll pass on the best qualities of their bloodline. An Irish-owned farm, Ashford Stud which is part of international horse racing business Coolmore, was built in recent years and features stone barns and bridges creating the charm of an earlier era. Stalls are filled with plush straw for bedding under chandeliers that shine in the cupolas.  <br />
Past Kentucky Derby winner Thunder Gulch's stud fees are as high as $125,000 per mating. A farm worker leads the stallion to a breeding barn.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720965.TIF
  • Pin Oak Farm owner and breeder Josephine Abercrombie ran a prominent 4,000 acre farm near Versailles. A horse lover in her childhood, she bred of highly-trained successful race horses. Racing season brings on a flurry of parties and social events. Abercrombie was philanthropic and highly respected. She died in 2022.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720968-2-3.JPG
  • Portrait of a wild horse in the snow-covered Ochoco National Forest in the Big Summit Wild Horse Territory in Oregon. The origins of the herd are not entirely clear according to the U.SD. Forest Service. Early accounts describe local ranchers in the 1920s turning loose quality animals from a good breeding stock to ensure a future supply of good horses. Recent genetic testing has linked the Ochoco Mustangs to Iberian and Andalusian stock, leaving much to be discovered about their true heritage.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222777.jpg
  • Portrait of a young, gentle-natured wild yearling scratching his neck on a tree limb. Ears pointed forward indicate the curious young horse shows little fear when approached in a slow, calm manner.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222792.jpg
  • Keeneland Race track's Thoroughbred horse auction for two-year olds is where horses often sell for six figures. A bid spotter dressed in a tuxedo searches the crowd while a video showing the horse sprinting on the track along with the time is show on monitors above.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720973-3.JPG
  • A large field of Thoroughbred horses blur as they run by the twin towers and down the stretch for the Kentucky Derby. This two minute horse race is one most famous in the world.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_737658-5.JPG
  • A large field of Thoroughbred horses blur as they run by the twin towers and down the stretch for the Kentucky Derby. This two minute horse race is one most famous in the world.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_737658-4.JPG
  • A pattern of light streaks across a young cowboy who competes in a horse show with his trained formerly wild mustang. Special competitions for trained wild horses draws interest in their abilities when adopted.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222900.jpg
  • A wild horse takes a dust bath by rolling  in the dirt.  It may be a sign he is happy or it may be to self-clean his coat by eliminating extra oils and to discourage insects.<br />
The more dominant horses will have a favourite rolling spot and will be the last to roll in it. This means that their scent is the strongest and therefore their rank is higher within the herd.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222799.jpg
  • Phantom, a charismatic white mustang, fights a roan stallion at the Wild Horse Sanctuary. He was captured by the U.S. Forest Service and rescued by loyal fans who raised money to save him. Once released with other horses, he was tested for hierarchy in the herd.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222773.jpg
  • A former wild horse now works a Wyoming range with a sheepherder. Dot was trained by prison inmates and adopted for the ranch. The first week he arrived, a herder was lost in a blizzard and in danger of freezing. The rider dropped the reins and held onto the horses neck as the sure-footed mustang found his way home.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222884.jpg
  • Two young studs playfully spar as they gain confidence and moves that will help them challenge older stallions for hierarchy in the herd. They bite and kick, running in circles and kicking up dust around the other horses.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222806.jpg
  • A former wild horse, adopted and trained, now works the Wyoming range with a sheepherder and his dog. Owners find that mustangs are sure-footed on a trail and spook less than domesticated horses.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222788.jpg
Next