fbpx
Wikipedia

Paso Fino

The Paso Fino is a naturally gaited light horse breed dating back to horses imported to the Caribbean from Spain. Pasos are prized for their smooth, natural, four-beat, lateral ambling gait; they are used in many disciplines, but are especially popular for trail riding. In the United States two main groups of horses are popularly called "Paso Fino": One, also known as the Paso Fino Puro Puertorriqueño, originated in Puerto Rico.[1]: 331  The other, often called the Colombian Paso Fino or Colombian Criollo Horse, developed in Colombia. Though from similar Spanish ancestors, the two groups developed independently of one another in their home nations.

Paso Fino
Paso Fino stallion
Other namesPure Puerto Rican Paso Fino
Colombian Paso Fino
Colombian Criollo Horse "Paso Fino Form"
Paso
PF
Country of originPuerto Rico, Colombia, other Latin American nations
Traits
Distinguishing featuresRelatively small with fine build, gaited
Breed standards
  • Paso Fino Horse Association (USA)
  • Paso Fino Association Europe
  • Federación del Deporte de Caballos de Paso Fino de Puerto Rico
  • Pure Puerto Rican Paso Fino Federation of America
  • Fedequinas (Colombia)
  • American Trote & Trocha Association

History

The Paso Fino name means 'fine step'. The Paso Fino is a blend of the Barb, Spanish Jennet, and Andalusian horse and was bred by Spanish land owners in Puerto Rico and Colombia to be used in the plantations because of their endurance and comfortable ride. All Pasos share their heritage with the Peruvian Paso, the American Mustangs, and other descendants of Colonial Spanish Horses. Puerto Rican and Colombian horses, as well as Paso Finos from Cuba and other tropical countries, have been interbred frequently in the United States to produce the modern American Paso Fino show horse.

On the second voyage of Christopher Columbus from Spain to the Americas in 1493, he disembarked with his soldiers, 20 horses and 5 mares on the island of Borinquen at the bay of Aguada (today Añasco), and gave the region the name San Juan Bautista.[2][3] Soon after, in May 1509, the first governor of the island, Juan Ponce de León, brought horses to Puerto Rico from his hacienda, El Higuey, located on the neighboring island of La Española (now Hispaniola).[4]

Puerto Rican Paso Fino

The Puerto Rican Paso Fino was developed on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico over a 500-year colonial period.[5] Island geography and the desires of a people for hardy, sure-footed, comfortable horses led to the independent development of the breed. Frenchman Andres Pedro Ledru, in a notation about horse races held on 17 July 1797, wrote that the speed of these horses was admirable, "they have no trot or gallop, but a type of pace (Andadura). A gait so precipitated that the eye can't follow the movement of the legs."[6] As early as 1849, Paso Fino competitions were held in Puerto Rico, with prizes for winners, for the purpose of improving local horses. In 1882 the first racetrack was built, and in every race meet, there were Paso Fino and Andadura categories.[7]

According to genetic research, Puerto Rican Paso Fino originated from the local Criollo (non-purerbred) horses that were a product of many years of admixture between different Iberian breeds originally brought to the island by the Spanish settlers. These horses carried with them a mutant "gait-keeper" allele that first increased in the Puerto Rican Criollo population as they were bred for centuries for the smooth ride long before the Paso Fino breed was established on the island. In fact, the Criollo horses in Puerto Rico still carry a genomic signature of selection around the "gait-keeper" locus today. Consequently, the Paso Finos, where the mutation is present at 100%, must have originated as a local breed from the population of local non-purebred horses on this island, where they were later selected for other characteristics to improve gait and appearance.[8]

According to Ramirez de Arellano, when the United States invaded Puerto Rico in 1898, the Paso Fino played a first-order role in transportation as well as agricultural work. Manchado, a notable horse of the time owned by Don Nicolás Quiñones Cabezudo of Caguas, was said to be "so fine that it gaited at liberty without its rider in the town square when asked."[9]

In 1927 the most influential sire in the modern Puerto Rican Paso Fino breed, Dulce Sueño, was born in Guayama.[10][11] In 1943, the Federation of the Sport of Paso Fino Horses of Puerto Rico and a breed registry were established. Copita Don Q, a Dulce Sueño grandson, was the winner of the first annual Federation contest in 1943.[12] In an agricultural almanac published in 1947, Gustavo A Ramirez de Arellano wrote, "at present the descendants of the famous stallion 'Dulce Sueño' are the ones who have most obtained titles and trophies from the association of owners of saddle horses."[13]

Colombian Paso

Importation and development in the United States

The rise of the Paso Fino in the United States began in the 1950s and 1960s. The first Paso Finos in the United States were imported by members of the armed services, who purchased the horses while stationed in Puerto Rico. This stock provided some of the first Paso Finos bred in the United States.

Colombian Pasos came to the United States beginning with a rancher who visited Colombia and purchased quite a number of the horses to work his cattle. He introduced the second strain into the US. While the two strains are still bred individually to retain their purity, they are also crossbred to produce the best of both strains.[14]

Today, the Paso Fino Horse Association (PFHA) oversees and regulates registered Paso Finos in the US. It was founded in 1972 under the name "American Paso Finos", later changing to its current name. It registers and promotes both Puerto Rican and Colombian horses, and under the PFHA, the two groups have been frequently crossbred.[15] As the numbers of Colombian horses have begun to significantly outnumber those of Puerto Rican bloodlines, a trend has developed favoring preservation breeding to preserve the bloodlines of each group.

The American Trote & Trocha Association formed to promote the horses, primarily of Colombian breeding, that perform a diagonal ambling gait known as the "Trocha". The Trocha differs from the classic lateral ambling gait of the Paso Fino.

Characteristics

 
This mare has tiger eye, an eye color so far only found in Puerto Rican Paso Finos.

The Paso Fino tends to be refined, standing an average of 13 to 15.2 hands (52 to 62 inches, 132 to 157 cm) but is powerful for its size.[16] It has a convex head, clean legs and a relatively short back with prominent withers.[17] Cannon bones tend to be short and the hooves are hard. The Paso Fino often has a thick mane and tail. It is found in all horse colors and there are no restrictions by the various breed associations.[18] The Puerto Rican Paso Fino is the only breed in which tiger eye was found, which usually lightens the eyes to a striking amber, yellow, or bright orange color.[19]

The action of the two strains is somewhat different. The Puerto Rican Paso Fino is prized for its fine or delicate step, while the Colombian Paso Fino tends to have more of a rapid, piston-like action.

This is a lively horse that has a natural drive and willingness, known colloquially as "brio", and generally an amiable disposition. Paso Finos come in a variety of colors, sizes and body types, but the even four-beat gait and brio are present in all good representatives of the breed.[20]

 
A Paso Fino gelding of predominantly Colombian breeding

Gaits

The Paso Fino executes a natural evenly spaced four-beat lateral ambling gait, similar to many gaited horses. Both the Colombian and the Puerto Rican strains of the Paso Fino execute the lateral gait naturally, without the aid of training devices.

The Paso Fino's gaits are performed at varied levels of extension in stride. All four hooves travel close to the ground while in motion and are lifted equally in height as the horse covers ground. At whatever speed the horse travels, the smoothness of the gait ideally allows the rider to appear motionless with little up and down movement.[21]

 
Paso Fino performing Classic Fino
  • The classic fino or paso fino is a collected gait with rapid footfalls that covers as little ground as possible. It requires a high degree of collection. This is a show gait reserved for competition. Walking, trotting, cantering or any detected break from the rapid evenly spaced sequence of steps is grounds for disqualification at any time during a fino event.
  • The paso corto is slightly more extended, and used during trail rides. The speed of this gait is comparable to the speed of a trot but is much smoother.
  • The paso largo is a fast, lateral, four-beat gait in which the horse can reach speeds equivalent to a canter or slow gallop. The paso largo is not just an increase in speed but also shows a distinct extension in stride. The paso largo can be extremely fast, up to 25-30 mph.

Only a few Paso Finos can perform a true classic fino, but the majority perform the other gaits with ease. The correctness of the gait is very important by today's standards, therefore horses with a very even four-beat gait are much preferred for professional breeding.[20]

In Colombia, some related native horses perform a slightly different, unevenly timed diagonal four-beat gait, known as the trocha, which is similar to the fox trot, and very smooth. While some Paso Finos will perform the trocha, it is discouraged and considered a fault in the purebred Paso Fino. In Colombia the "trocha" has evolved, becoming a separate genealogical line. It is inherited in a manner similar to the lateral ambling gaits of the purebred Paso Fino. Trocha rivals in popularity with paso fino in Colombia, but crossbreeding is now avoided. Another Colombian breed performs what is known as trote y galope. The trote y galope horses perform an exaggerated diagonal two-beat trot and a very collected canter, but they do share some common heritage with the Paso Fino. Not as well known as Paso Fino, these variants are just beginning to be recognized in the United States.[22]

Uses

Paso Finos are versatile and are used in many disciplines. They have horse shows for the breed only, but are also seen competing in all-breed disciplines such as well as trail riding and endurance competition, driving and gymkhana.[14]

References

  1. ^ Hendricks, Bonnie Lou and Anthony Dent (1995). International Encyclopedia of Horse Breeds. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 9780806138848.
  2. ^ page 1 Cria y mejoramiento de Caballos de Paso Fino de Puerto Rico, Dr Carlos Gaztambide Arillaga 1981
  3. ^ "Puerto Rico Research report". daphne.palomar.edu. from the original on 2009-05-04. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  4. ^ Juan Villanueva,Paso Fino: A Puerto Rican Breed Magazine, Vol 1, p. 18
  5. ^ "El Deporte de Caballos de Paso Fino". EnciclopediaPR (in Spanish). 2020-10-12. from the original on 2021-02-27. Retrieved 2021-09-12.
  6. ^ Eduardo A Quijano, Raza Que Distingue Un Pueblo, p. 9, CPR SF 293.P37 Q54 1991 c.2
  7. ^ foreword, Gaztambide 1981
  8. ^ Wolfsberger, W. W.; Ayala, N. M.; Castro-Marquez, S. O.; Irizarry-Negron, V. M.; Potapchuk, A.; Shchubelka, K.; Potish, L.; Majeske, A. J.; Figueroa-Oliver, L.; Diaz-Lameiro, A.; Martínez-Cruzado, J. C.; Lindgren, G.; Oleksyk, T. K. (2022), "Genetic diversity and selection in Puerto Rican horses", Scientific Reports, 12 (515): 515, doi:10.1038/s41598-021-04537-5, PMC 8752667, PMID 35017609
  9. ^ Gustavo A Ramirez de Arellano, El Caballo de Paso Fino de Puerto Rico, p. 145, Puerto Rico SF 293.P37 R35 1947, referenced on January 1, 2009
  10. ^ Romero-Barcelo, Carlos. "Puerto Rico's Paso Fino Horse: The Epitome of Elegance in World Horsemanship". Library of Congress. from the original on 2017-01-10. Retrieved 2021-09-12.
  11. ^ . purepuertoricanpasofinos.com. Archived from the original on 2009-03-14. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  12. ^ page 225, La Gran Enciclopedia de Puerto Rico, 11 Deportes, 1976. Referenced on December 14th 2008
  13. ^ Arellano, El Caballo, p. 143
  14. ^ a b "The Paso Fino" 2007-10-18 at the Wayback Machine. Paso Fino Horse Association. Referenced January 6, 2008.
  15. ^ 2007 PFHA Stud Book on CD
  16. ^ Johnson, D.; Johnson, S. (2014). How To Raise Horses: Everything You Need to Know. Voyageur Press. p. 14. ISBN 9780760345269. from the original on 2021-09-12. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  17. ^ Hendricks, B.L.; Dent, A.A. (2007). International Encyclopedia of Horse Breeds. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 333. ISBN 9780806138848. from the original on 2021-09-12. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  18. ^ "Paso Fino Breed". pfha.org. from the original on 2017-09-08. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  19. ^ Mack M, Kowalski E, Grahn R, Bras D, Penedo MC, Bellone R (August 1, 2017). "Two Variants in SLC24A5 Are Associated with "Tiger-Eye" Iris Pigmentation in Puerto Rican Paso Fino Horses". G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics. 7 (8): 2799–2806. doi:10.1534/g3.117.043786. PMC 5555483. PMID 28655738. from the original on 2019-04-19. Retrieved 2019-04-19.
    • Christine Barakat; Mick Mccluskey (February 9, 2022). "Genetic basis for "tiger eye" identified". Equus.
  20. ^ a b "Der Paso Fino" 2007-09-25 at the Wayback Machine, Paso Fino Association Europe. Referenced January 6, 2008.
  21. ^ . fourbranch.com. Archived from the original on 2009-07-04. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  22. ^ "Breed Information" 2008-02-15 at the Wayback Machine. American Trote and Trocha Association. Referenced January 6, 2008.

paso, fino, naturally, gaited, light, horse, breed, dating, back, horses, imported, caribbean, from, spain, pasos, prized, their, smooth, natural, four, beat, lateral, ambling, gait, they, used, many, disciplines, especially, popular, trail, riding, united, st. The Paso Fino is a naturally gaited light horse breed dating back to horses imported to the Caribbean from Spain Pasos are prized for their smooth natural four beat lateral ambling gait they are used in many disciplines but are especially popular for trail riding In the United States two main groups of horses are popularly called Paso Fino One also known as the Paso Fino Puro Puertorriqueno originated in Puerto Rico 1 331 The other often called the Colombian Paso Fino or Colombian Criollo Horse developed in Colombia Though from similar Spanish ancestors the two groups developed independently of one another in their home nations Paso FinoPaso Fino stallionOther namesPure Puerto Rican Paso Fino Colombian Paso Fino Colombian Criollo Horse Paso Fino Form Paso PFCountry of originPuerto Rico Colombia other Latin American nationsTraitsDistinguishing featuresRelatively small with fine build gaitedBreed standardsPaso Fino Horse Association USA Paso Fino Association EuropeFederacion del Deporte de Caballos de Paso Fino de Puerto RicoPure Puerto Rican Paso Fino Federation of AmericaFedequinas Colombia American Trote amp Trocha AssociationEquus ferus caballus Contents 1 History 1 1 Puerto Rican Paso Fino 1 2 Colombian Paso 1 3 Importation and development in the United States 2 Characteristics 2 1 Gaits 3 Uses 4 ReferencesHistory EditThe Paso Fino name means fine step The Paso Fino is a blend of the Barb Spanish Jennet and Andalusian horse and was bred by Spanish land owners in Puerto Rico and Colombia to be used in the plantations because of their endurance and comfortable ride All Pasos share their heritage with the Peruvian Paso the American Mustangs and other descendants of Colonial Spanish Horses Puerto Rican and Colombian horses as well as Paso Finos from Cuba and other tropical countries have been interbred frequently in the United States to produce the modern American Paso Fino show horse On the second voyage of Christopher Columbus from Spain to the Americas in 1493 he disembarked with his soldiers 20 horses and 5 mares on the island of Borinquen at the bay of Aguada today Anasco and gave the region the name San Juan Bautista 2 3 Soon after in May 1509 the first governor of the island Juan Ponce de Leon brought horses to Puerto Rico from his hacienda El Higuey located on the neighboring island of La Espanola now Hispaniola 4 Puerto Rican Paso Fino Edit The Puerto Rican Paso Fino was developed on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico over a 500 year colonial period 5 Island geography and the desires of a people for hardy sure footed comfortable horses led to the independent development of the breed Frenchman Andres Pedro Ledru in a notation about horse races held on 17 July 1797 wrote that the speed of these horses was admirable they have no trot or gallop but a type of pace Andadura A gait so precipitated that the eye can t follow the movement of the legs 6 As early as 1849 Paso Fino competitions were held in Puerto Rico with prizes for winners for the purpose of improving local horses In 1882 the first racetrack was built and in every race meet there were Paso Fino and Andadura categories 7 According to genetic research Puerto Rican Paso Fino originated from the local Criollo non purerbred horses that were a product of many years of admixture between different Iberian breeds originally brought to the island by the Spanish settlers These horses carried with them a mutant gait keeper allele that first increased in the Puerto Rican Criollo population as they were bred for centuries for the smooth ride long before the Paso Fino breed was established on the island In fact the Criollo horses in Puerto Rico still carry a genomic signature of selection around the gait keeper locus today Consequently the Paso Finos where the mutation is present at 100 must have originated as a local breed from the population of local non purebred horses on this island where they were later selected for other characteristics to improve gait and appearance 8 According to Ramirez de Arellano when the United States invaded Puerto Rico in 1898 the Paso Fino played a first order role in transportation as well as agricultural work Manchado a notable horse of the time owned by Don Nicolas Quinones Cabezudo of Caguas was said to be so fine that it gaited at liberty without its rider in the town square when asked 9 In 1927 the most influential sire in the modern Puerto Rican Paso Fino breed Dulce Sueno was born in Guayama 10 11 In 1943 the Federation of the Sport of Paso Fino Horses of Puerto Rico and a breed registry were established Copita Don Q a Dulce Sueno grandson was the winner of the first annual Federation contest in 1943 12 In an agricultural almanac published in 1947 Gustavo A Ramirez de Arellano wrote at present the descendants of the famous stallion Dulce Sueno are the ones who have most obtained titles and trophies from the association of owners of saddle horses 13 Colombian Paso Edit Importation and development in the United States Edit The rise of the Paso Fino in the United States began in the 1950s and 1960s The first Paso Finos in the United States were imported by members of the armed services who purchased the horses while stationed in Puerto Rico This stock provided some of the first Paso Finos bred in the United States Colombian Pasos came to the United States beginning with a rancher who visited Colombia and purchased quite a number of the horses to work his cattle He introduced the second strain into the US While the two strains are still bred individually to retain their purity they are also crossbred to produce the best of both strains 14 Today the Paso Fino Horse Association PFHA oversees and regulates registered Paso Finos in the US It was founded in 1972 under the name American Paso Finos later changing to its current name It registers and promotes both Puerto Rican and Colombian horses and under the PFHA the two groups have been frequently crossbred 15 As the numbers of Colombian horses have begun to significantly outnumber those of Puerto Rican bloodlines a trend has developed favoring preservation breeding to preserve the bloodlines of each group The American Trote amp Trocha Association formed to promote the horses primarily of Colombian breeding that perform a diagonal ambling gait known as the Trocha The Trocha differs from the classic lateral ambling gait of the Paso Fino Characteristics Edit This mare has tiger eye an eye color so far only found in Puerto Rican Paso Finos The Paso Fino tends to be refined standing an average of 13 to 15 2 hands 52 to 62 inches 132 to 157 cm but is powerful for its size 16 It has a convex head clean legs and a relatively short back with prominent withers 17 Cannon bones tend to be short and the hooves are hard The Paso Fino often has a thick mane and tail It is found in all horse colors and there are no restrictions by the various breed associations 18 The Puerto Rican Paso Fino is the only breed in which tiger eye was found which usually lightens the eyes to a striking amber yellow or bright orange color 19 The action of the two strains is somewhat different The Puerto Rican Paso Fino is prized for its fine or delicate step while the Colombian Paso Fino tends to have more of a rapid piston like action This is a lively horse that has a natural drive and willingness known colloquially as brio and generally an amiable disposition Paso Finos come in a variety of colors sizes and body types but the even four beat gait and brio are present in all good representatives of the breed 20 A Paso Fino gelding of predominantly Colombian breeding Gaits Edit See also Ambling and Horse gait The Paso Fino executes a natural evenly spaced four beat lateral ambling gait similar to many gaited horses Both the Colombian and the Puerto Rican strains of the Paso Fino execute the lateral gait naturally without the aid of training devices The Paso Fino s gaits are performed at varied levels of extension in stride All four hooves travel close to the ground while in motion and are lifted equally in height as the horse covers ground At whatever speed the horse travels the smoothness of the gait ideally allows the rider to appear motionless with little up and down movement 21 Paso Fino performing Classic Fino The classic fino or paso fino is a collected gait with rapid footfalls that covers as little ground as possible It requires a high degree of collection This is a show gait reserved for competition Walking trotting cantering or any detected break from the rapid evenly spaced sequence of steps is grounds for disqualification at any time during a fino event The paso corto is slightly more extended and used during trail rides The speed of this gait is comparable to the speed of a trot but is much smoother The paso largo is a fast lateral four beat gait in which the horse can reach speeds equivalent to a canter or slow gallop The paso largo is not just an increase in speed but also shows a distinct extension in stride The paso largo can be extremely fast up to 25 30 mph Only a few Paso Finos can perform a true classic fino but the majority perform the other gaits with ease The correctness of the gait is very important by today s standards therefore horses with a very even four beat gait are much preferred for professional breeding 20 In Colombia some related native horses perform a slightly different unevenly timed diagonal four beat gait known as the trocha which is similar to the fox trot and very smooth While some Paso Finos will perform the trocha it is discouraged and considered a fault in the purebred Paso Fino In Colombia the trocha has evolved becoming a separate genealogical line It is inherited in a manner similar to the lateral ambling gaits of the purebred Paso Fino Trocha rivals in popularity with paso fino in Colombia but crossbreeding is now avoided Another Colombian breed performs what is known as trote y galope The trote y galope horses perform an exaggerated diagonal two beat trot and a very collected canter but they do share some common heritage with the Paso Fino Not as well known as Paso Fino these variants are just beginning to be recognized in the United States 22 Uses EditPaso Finos are versatile and are used in many disciplines They have horse shows for the breed only but are also seen competing in all breed disciplines such as well as trail riding and endurance competition driving and gymkhana 14 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paso Fino Hendricks Bonnie Lou and Anthony Dent 1995 International Encyclopedia of Horse Breeds Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 9780806138848 page 1 Cria y mejoramiento de Caballos de Paso Fino de Puerto Rico Dr Carlos Gaztambide Arillaga 1981 Puerto Rico Research report daphne palomar edu Archived from the original on 2009 05 04 Retrieved 2017 09 07 Juan Villanueva Paso Fino A Puerto Rican Breed Magazine Vol 1 p 18 El Deporte de Caballos de Paso Fino EnciclopediaPR in Spanish 2020 10 12 Archived from the original on 2021 02 27 Retrieved 2021 09 12 Eduardo A Quijano Raza Que Distingue Un Pueblo p 9 CPR SF 293 P37 Q54 1991 c 2 foreword Gaztambide 1981 Wolfsberger W W Ayala N M Castro Marquez S O Irizarry Negron V M Potapchuk A Shchubelka K Potish L Majeske A J Figueroa Oliver L Diaz Lameiro A Martinez Cruzado J C Lindgren G Oleksyk T K 2022 Genetic diversity and selection in Puerto Rican horses Scientific Reports 12 515 515 doi 10 1038 s41598 021 04537 5 PMC 8752667 PMID 35017609 Gustavo A Ramirez de Arellano El Caballo de Paso Fino de Puerto Rico p 145 Puerto Rico SF 293 P37 R35 1947 referenced on January 1 2009 Romero Barcelo Carlos Puerto Rico s Paso Fino Horse The Epitome of Elegance in World Horsemanship Library of Congress Archived from the original on 2017 01 10 Retrieved 2021 09 12 Dulce Sueno Fair History purepuertoricanpasofinos com Archived from the original on 2009 03 14 Retrieved 2017 09 07 page 225 La Gran Enciclopedia de Puerto Rico 11 Deportes 1976 Referenced on December 14th 2008 Arellano El Caballo p 143 a b The Paso Fino Archived 2007 10 18 at the Wayback Machine Paso Fino Horse Association Referenced January 6 2008 2007 PFHA Stud Book on CD Johnson D Johnson S 2014 How To Raise Horses Everything You Need to Know Voyageur Press p 14 ISBN 9780760345269 Archived from the original on 2021 09 12 Retrieved 2017 09 07 Hendricks B L Dent A A 2007 International Encyclopedia of Horse Breeds University of Oklahoma Press p 333 ISBN 9780806138848 Archived from the original on 2021 09 12 Retrieved 2017 09 07 Paso Fino Breed pfha org Archived from the original on 2017 09 08 Retrieved 2017 09 07 Mack M Kowalski E Grahn R Bras D Penedo MC Bellone R August 1 2017 Two Variants in SLC24A5 Are Associated with Tiger Eye Iris Pigmentation in Puerto Rican Paso Fino Horses G3 Genes Genomes Genetics 7 8 2799 2806 doi 10 1534 g3 117 043786 PMC 5555483 PMID 28655738 Archived from the original on 2019 04 19 Retrieved 2019 04 19 Christine Barakat Mick Mccluskey February 9 2022 Genetic basis for tiger eye identified Equus a b Der Paso Fino Archived 2007 09 25 at the Wayback Machine Paso Fino Association Europe Referenced January 6 2008 History of Paso Fino fourbranch com Archived from the original on 2009 07 04 Retrieved 2017 09 07 Breed Information Archived 2008 02 15 at the Wayback Machine American Trote and Trocha Association Referenced January 6 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paso Fino amp oldid 1156232101, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.