WayMaker Walkaloosas

WayMaker Walkaloosas We specialize in boldly colored gaited trail horses and nongaited endurance partners—athletic, sure-footed, and full of personality.

Our focus is on health longetivity. From brain to hoof, we breed smart, sturdy, versatile horses built to go the distance.

05/10/2026

Gotta love a happy customer 😂😂❤️ Thanks for sending an update of Haggard, Mikayla Brooke Metcalf!

05/10/2026

Another Gus update! Only his 4th ride and he’s killing it 👌🏼. I think we need Jenn and Todd training full time ❤️.

Everyone, meet Charisma! 🌟 She is our new homozygous LP registered AMHR mare and the final piece of a puzzle we’ve been ...
05/09/2026

Everyone, meet Charisma! 🌟 She is our new homozygous LP registered AMHR mare and the final piece of a puzzle we’ve been working on. We have been looking diligently for the perfect mare to start our journey into miniatures, and she was worth the wait!

WM is expanding into this area for Dutch and therapeutic purposes as well. ❤️ With a registered AMHR stallion and now Charisma, we will be offering stallion services, selling one miniature foal each year, and taking these cuties around to spread some joy —growing a legacy, one tiny hoofprint at a time!

05/07/2026
My favorite part of the LP genes are seeing the horses change every year when they shed off! Weezy was born a solid Cham...
05/03/2026

My favorite part of the LP genes are seeing the horses change every year when they shed off!

Weezy was born a solid Champagne, but we knew he had the appy genes. He is getting the most beautiful snowflake spots this year. ❄️

05/03/2026

This is Gus’s first day with a rider and he has carried a flag 🇺🇸 , drug a barrel, and now he’s seen a rope 🐮 .

These Cochise babies sure are confident and smart! What a great job you and Toddly have done with Gus, Jennifer Y. Housley ❤️❤️.

Meet VooDoo 🔮. He is our blue roan TWHBEA/McCurdy stallion. If you appreciate gaited horses but are unfamiliar with McCu...
04/24/2026

Meet VooDoo 🔮.

He is our blue roan TWHBEA/McCurdy stallion.

If you appreciate gaited horses but are unfamiliar with McCurdy Plantation horses, it is certainly worth exploring this breed further.

He possesses an exceptional temperament, accompanied by a strong work ethic. At only four years old, he demonstrates remarkable versatility, riding smoothly in the mountains, driving a wagon, and instructing children in riding lessons.

His color and good looks are just the 🍒 on top.

Peep momma Toast in all her pregnant glory❤️.
04/13/2026

Peep momma Toast in all her pregnant glory❤️.

And GUESS WHAT?! We have horses that were part of this study in our herd ❤️. They are extremely hardy, smart and free of...
03/20/2026

And GUESS WHAT?! We have horses that were part of this study in our herd ❤️. They are extremely hardy, smart and free of genetic ailments. How awesome to see the history rewritten!

THE COMPELLING CASE: NORTH AMERICAN WILD HORSES SURVIVED THE ICE AGE IN SPLINTER POPULATIONS AND ARE MORE “AMERICAN” THAN BISON, ELK, OR DEER

By: William E. Simpson II - Wild Horse Researcher @2026

American wild horses (Equus caballus) are not an invasive species introduced by Europeans. They are one of the oldest continuous native large mammals on the continent — far older than the Indigenous peoples who arrived from Asia approximately 15,000–40,000 years ago, or the bison, elk, and deer that crossed the Bering Land Bridge in waves beginning roughly 200,000 years ago.

The horse family (Equidae) evolved in North America over 55 million years ago. While most large mammals disappeared at the end of the Pleistocene (~11,000 years ago), multiple lines of evidence now prove that splinter populations of caballine horses survived the Ice Age and persisted into the Holocene in North America.

Direct Scientific Evidence of Holocene Survival

Murchie et al. (2021) – Nature Communications (University of Alberta / Yukon paleogenomics team)
Sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) from permafrost cores in northern North America shows Equus persisting thousands of years after the supposed fossil extinction: “The youngest signatures for Equus … (ca. 5700 cal BP) … imply local survival of these taxa long after the Pleistocene-Holocene transition.”
Taylor et al. (2023) – Science

Environmental DNA analysis confirms horse presence in arctic zones “as late as 5000 to 6000 years before the present.”

Ross MacPhee (Curator Emeritus, American Museum of Natural History)
“Horses survived at least in northern North America for thousands of years after the time of the big losses — at least up to about 5700 years ago.”

Yvette Running Horse Collin (2017) – PhD Dissertation, University of Alaska Fairbanks
“The results of this thesis conclude that the Indigenous horse of the Americas survived the ‘Ice Age’ and the original Peoples of these continents had a relationship with them from Pleistocene times to the time of ‘First-Contact.’”

Claire Henderson (1991) – Laval University, “The Aboriginal North American Horse”
Dakota/Lakota oral histories and ethnohistorical records confirm horses never disappeared after the Ice Age and were part of pre-contact Indigenous culture.

Michael Hofreiter & related genomic studies
The Late Pleistocene “Yukon horse” (Equus lambei) is genetically indistinguishable from modern Equus caballus.

Spanish Horses Were a Later Addition — Not the Origin

Spanish re-introductions (beginning 1519–1521 with Cortés) brought larger, cavalry-bred horses (compared to 'Indian Ponies' observed and documented by early French explorers) suited to mounted conquistadors. These animals were added to existing native populations. It is logistically impossible for them to have feralized, crossed 3,000 miles of mountains, deserts, major rivers, and territories occupied by tens of millions of Indigenous peoples (who captured loose livestock), and then appeared as fully integrated herds on the Oregon–California border by Drake’s documented 1579 sighting — 101 years before the Pueblo Revolt of 1680, the event historians traditionally cite as the moment horses first became widely available to northern tribes.

The BLM’s Documented Misinformation and Economic Motive

The Bureau of Land Management has repeatedly lied in official documents to Congress. In the 2018 “Path Forward” Report to Congress (Executive Summary, p. 1), the BLM stated in writing:
“Wild horses and burros have no natural predators and herds can double in size every 4 years.”
This is false. Recent university studies prove wild horses are a major prey species for apex predators:

Andreasen et al. (2021, University of Nevada Reno): “Diets of cougars … were composed predominantly of horses (59.6%).”

Iacono et al. (2024): “79% of collared cougars preyed on horses across all age and s*x classes.”

The BLM’s false narrative — “no natural predators,” “invasive species,” “must be managed/removed” — is driven by economic incentives. Labeling horses “invasive” justifies roundups, long-term holding (~$150 million/year taxpayer cost), fertility control contracts, and eventual extermination before they can be rightfully protected as an endangered native North American species. This myth has been repeated so often it has become “accepted fact,” despite being contradicted by genetics, ancient DNA, ethnohistory, and direct predator-prey studies.

Conclusion
North American wild horses are more 'American native' than the Indigenous peoples, bison, elk, or deer. They evolved here, survived the Ice Age in splinter populations, and were already present when Spanish horses arrived as a later addition. The BLM’s documented lies serve a clear economic purpose: to maintain the false “invasive species” label and prevent legal protections. The science is now unequivocal. It is time to correct the record and recognize America’s wild horses for what they truly are — one of our oldest and most iconic native species.

References

Murchie et al. (2021). Nature Communications.
Taylor et al. (2023). Science.
Collin, Y.R.H. (2017). PhD Dissertation, University of Alaska Fairbanks.
Henderson, C. (1991). “The Aboriginal North American Horse,” Laval University.
Andreasen et al. (2021). Journal of Wildlife Management.
BLM (2018). Report to Congress: Management Options for a Sustainable Wild Horse and B***o Program.
MacPhee, R. (multiple statements, 2021–2023). American Museum of Natural History.

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr Doug Burgum TheHorse.com The Horse Magazine EQUUS Film & Arts Fest Equus Magazine NPR The Discovery Science Place Your Discovery Science Animal Planet Sam Bentley

We finally got Hatchet Jack’s full DNA panel back from Etalon Equine Genetics and we are so excited about him. He is a h...
02/09/2026

We finally got Hatchet Jack’s full DNA panel back from Etalon Equine Genetics and we are so excited about him. He is a healthy, 5-panel negative, boy. ALL offspring from him will have appaloosa spots (LP/LP) and have a possibility of inheriting his gait genes (DMRT3) and blue eyes (EDXW3) as well as primitive dun markings!

He is one special foal ❤️.

02/02/2026

Throwback to baby Weeble. She’s still a spitfire and is going to be just like her momma, Bling!

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Belvidere, TN
37306

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