Horses and the City

Okay, I’m really not trying to mooch off a 2000s TV series also based on a journalist. I would have thought of the title anyway. If I’d really wanted to play with that show title, I would have written: horSes and the City.

That said… The thing is, I really do believe that horses could be the new green energy of the future, if we gave them a chance. Yes, it makes everything slower, I know. But you know what? I could go with slow, honestly. I’m not saying it’s realistic at the moment, but I’d sure like it to be. The speed of modern life is killing us every bit as much as the pollution is.

My new publication in the November 2019 issue of Cheval Magazine is about having horses in the city again. I checked with authorities, and horses are even allowed inside Paris–on the condition that riders don’t get off and lead them by hand because that converts them from vehicles into livestock, and that’s not allowed.

One of my sources, the president of the French Society for Working Equids (SFET), had some great insight about reintroducing horses into the city. (SFET has a fascinating second website, in English, on “horse energy” in today’s world.) First, President Eric Rousseaux said it’s important to consider their presence as progress, not regression. In other words, we can move forward with using horse power with a modern view and modern knowledge and technology (which can include electric-supported wagons), as well as a better insight into equine health and welfare, instead of seeing this as a return to the old past.

Secondly, he said we as horse people need to be careful about reintroducing the horses in the cities, as people aren’t used to this. We need to make sure things go smoothly so the horses are accepted and that people have a positive image of this idea. We need to be courteous and polite–essentially make friends, not enemies, with the communities. After all, we always have to keep in mind that even when the law says we have the right to work with our horses in the cities, we can’t forget this critical point: especially when it comes to animals, there’s always a risk of losing our social license to operate (more on that in some upcoming articles–I’ll add links once published).

So with that in mind, I’ve decided to embark on a mission of trying out the Horse in the City life, starting with just my small town of 4000 people only 4 km away. I can get there through back roads, avoiding the main highway (which is incredibly dangerous even by car). I’d like to begin by going to the grocery store and the post office, and maybe even the laundromat (but I’ll need better transport equipment and bigger pack bags for that).

To get started, I’m going to take Eric Rousseaux’s advice and be courteous with shop managers, checking in with the businesses to let them know I plan to come by horseback and will tie up the horses nearby. I also need to look into the materials I need to be sure Sabrina (who will be my “pack Trakehner”) can comfortably carry my stuff. And I’ll do some early tests to make sure both Solstice (whom I’ll be riding) and Sabrina are desensitized to various city-related sights and noises and smells.

If you can think of other prep ideas, please let me know!

Sweet working horse in Rome I photographed last fall in front of the Pantheon.
© Christa Lesté-Lasserre

2 Comments

  1. When I lived in Rockland, Maine in the USA I was a member of a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) Farmshare and my weekly delivery of local produce was delivered by horse-drawn wagon. I loved this and it really did bring people out of their houses to pet the horse and we would chat long after the wagon had moved on.

    • Christa

      November 14, 2019 at 11:11 am

      That’s a beautiful story, Monica! Thanks for sharing. I would love to see that happen more often today. Telephones are convenient, but we are really turning torwards a virtual society. It’s nice to share the world with individuals (horses) who don’t use screens like we do, and who remind us that being social is part of our human ethology, too.

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