![]() In 1977, only four mares remained on an island in Lac La Croix, north-western Ontario. It's a story that could have been written in Hollywood. That the breed has survived is due to an event Snow depicts in her painting titled The Heist Across the Ice by the Light of the Moon. But, having been culled to near-extinction by European settlers who considered the wild animals a nuisance, the horses themselves were few and far between. Such as the Métis fishermen who partnered with the horses each winter to haul fish off frozen lakes – although the horses were never domesticated back then, they would use their hooves to create ice fishing holes in return for food and shelter from the fishermen. ![]() She travelled around Indigenous communities and heard many stories of Indigenous peoples' reciprocal relationship with the Ojibwe spirit horse, seeing the animals as guides and teachers. "I thought to myself, someday I'm going to find them," she said. Snow explained that she was a young girl living in north-western Ontario when she overheard some elders talking about these small, hardy horses that lived free in the boreal forest. Nationally renowned for her vivid Woodlands-style paintings, Snow was here to talk about her lifelong work preserving the endangered Ojibwe spirit horse the breed, also known as the Lac La Croix Indian pony, is the only known indigenous horse breed in Canada. I was at the Pibón (winter) festival, and the Anishinaabe artist Rhonda Snow stepped on a small stage that still seemed to tremble from the exuberant footsteps of just-departed pow wow dancers. It was a bright day in December 2021 and snow was lightly falling over Mādahòki Farm, an Indigenous visitor attraction and event space just outside Ottawa, Canada.
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