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Ultimo aggiornamento il:
10/03/01

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SAN FRATELLO
OTHER NEWS AND STORIES

Maybe, when you think of Sicily and the Nebrodi mountains, you expect to find dark skinned people in this sunburnt land so close to Africa. These people descend from Arabs and Normans, just like their horses, and surprisingly you will find a fair amount of light coloured eyes and plenty of fair hair, far horizons over dry yellowish plains.

The hold that the Nebrodis have on people’s heart is hard and difficult to escape. The Nebrodis at sunset are dramatic and beautiful at the same time. An aura of mystery and isolation surrounds the panorama at sunrise and you feel that you must leave, but at the same time that you have to come back again and again.

In the vast woods of oaks, beech, olive and cork trees, there are roaming herds of black wild horses that are the legacy of the light oriental horses brought in early ages by the Arab invaders. Over the centuries they have been crossed with the horses brought by the Normans and the Spanish noblesse.

They eat whatever they find in the woods, after the cows and the sheep have left moved on. The natural selection makes several victims every year, during the snowy winter in the high sloping woods where the hunger and the cold have no pity. You can only find mares, because all the young colts are caught, separated from the mothers at weaning time and sold at the Fairs, mostly being bought for the butcher lot.

San Fratello is a small village on the mountains, 70 Km from Messina. For some reason a group of Lombard's following Ruggero il Normanno (Roger the Norman)  decided to stay and to re-build an ancient town, probably called Aluntium (Apolonia) destroyed by the Arabs. This explains why the language spoken at San Fratello is full of gallic words. It also explains the blue and green eyes and even blond hair of the people. San Fratello kept all the traditions, not only its own language. They are all breeders, they breed sheep, goats, horses with enthusiasm, and until twenty years ago when a daughter married she would take a bunch of the best mares as a dowry.

Sicily is characterised by a very different territory conformation. The various streams and rivers of the island allow different cultivations. When you sit at the table you will find almonds, hazelnuts, capers, broad beans, olives, cheese and  wine, sheep’s meat and salami from the black pigs of the Nebrodis.

North of the Nebrodis is the Tyrrenian Sea and South of the mountains is Etna, the volcano, along with the Alcantara and Simeto rivers. The highest point is Mount Soro, 1800m. and the land goes down from there through wide valleys where small rivers run to the sea.

HOW TO GET THERE: from the airports of Palermo or Catania it takes tow hours to reach San Fratello. The highway A20 Messina Palermo will take you most of the way.

The Fair

Out in the streets the cars are covered with the red sand of the desert that the Scirocco wind brings from Africa and the air is dry and hot.

Early in the morning they were already there: hundreds of black horses separated in large groups according to their age and status, the 18 month fillies in one paddock, the 30 month olds in the next one, then came the broodmares with foal at the side and the barren ones in the last big paddock. The few males that were kept after the big killing at 12 months were standing well away, held by the owners, rearing on their hind legs as they tried to reach the females paddocks at the distance.

At nine o’clock in the morning the last horses arrived, either led, ridden or tied to cars and tractors that move slowly through the village in a long procession of neighing, dark and shiny horses  trotting rhythmically while they go past children riding their  pushbikes and old people going to the church wearing their traditional dark clothes that help keep the heat away in those hot lands.

The horses' owners and the buyers discuss everything in front of a glass of wine and some savoury sheep cheese, glancing at the girls going past and joking about horses and women. Time doesn’t exist, it may take anything from ten minutes to a whole day to discuss a project.

The horses lean on each other for comfort, so many of them have met there for the first time. No kicking goes on, apparently the hierarchy was established as each horse went in the paddock, they patiently wait to be watered from big bins. The younger fillies are a bit under stress, they have lost their guides and they wander nervously from one side to the other, all morning. The foals keep by their mothers, everything is perfect as long ad their mother feels safe, but when one of the broodmares is caught with a long stick with a lazoo at the end, all the broodmares start galloping away, frightened, and the babies scream for help and stop, blow highly in wonder and finally they ask to rub their silky noses on the mother’s head.

The young stallions, very few every year (this time there were five 30 month olds), prance along as their owners walk proudly showing them off. They rear and strike trying to get some freedom and they answer the “girls” with typical guttural vocalizations.

So many perfect unshod black hoofs move around us, all nice and round with the natural trimming of the harsh mountain stones,  the long canters in the morning and at night to get to the nearest source of water. The wild horses move around during the cold night in the summer, and they sleep in the shades during the day, head against tail to keep each others free of flies and to better investigate the surroundings for signs of danger.

One of the dreaded dangers is the fire, that every summer destroys a big spot of the bottom woods, but luckily not the higher ones. Every year in the beginning of September the breeders of Sanfratello’s horses give life to the Fair grounds. Time seems to stop when the audience gets swallowed in dust whilst waiting for a group of fillies to settle down after a few men went in the paddock to catch some and get them ready for showing. Young children pass along the ropes from under the paddock  rails, sending shivers down their mother's spines when they creep in to help their fathers to catch a nervous filly that wants to stay with the rest of the group.

Old men smoke and count  the money after a sale, big smiles with missing teeth and the light green eyes, courtesy of the northern invaders, shining like emeralds in the sun on the wrinkly tanned faces. They are proud, tough, rather wild in their soul – horses and people from Sanfratello.

THE BREED

Over the centuries the San Fratellano horses became a breed of their own with their own set of morphological standards. These beautiful baroque black horses evolved from their ancestors through a very tough process of natural selection.

Unfortunately, due to the fact that the majority of the archives were destroyed during the years, the earliest genealogy records for the San Fratellano's date back to only 1925, the same year in which breeding was aimed at improving the overall equine production of Sicily. At first, around 1930/1935, they used Arabian (Oriental) and TB stallions, as well as some Maremmano horse which, they believed, allowed to improve some major defects in conformation of the original breed whilst maintaining its overall appearance and morphological characteristics virtually intact. In 1959, following the same principles five stallions of the Nonius breed (Ungarian origins) were imported into Sicily and again used to improve the San Fratellano, however the general opinion at the time was that the Nonius horses produced lymphatic foals that struggled to adapt to the tough environment of the Nebrodi mountains. In fact only some lines of the original nucleus were bred to the Nonius and the Maremmano.  In 1995 the official Stud Book for the San Fratellano's was created and since then the objective of the breeders has been to try and recover the original matrix of the San Fratellano.

This has resulted in a breed of horses that are extremely tough and resilient and which can survive illnesses and diseases that would kill the majority of domesticated horses. Their heads are typically heavy with a hint of a roman nose, the neck is often arched and sowing a thick mane. The shoulders are muscular although sometimes they tend to be on the straight side. The withers are well defined and the back rather longish. The loins are wide and the croup is well developed, strong and sloping. The chest is usually wide and deep, the limbs are powerful with good bone measurements, the knees are flat and wide and free from blemishes, the feet are proportionate and very solid. The coat is normally dark in colour ranging from bay to dark bay and black. They have virtually no white markings. The overall appearance suggests strength and harmony, they have regular gaits with a somewhat extravagant action.

Not far from the main town of Messina and at the feet of mount Etna (active volcano), the Nebrodi's are an area of outstanding natural beauty where one can catch a glimpse of a Northern Forest surviving in a land which is so close to Africa. 

The horses are free to roam and they have to fend for themselves in a climate and environment which is nothing short of hostile with extremes temperatures all year round ranging from sub zero in Winter to prolonged periods of heat and draught in the Summer. The colts and fillies are not wormed or vaccinated until they reach the age of three in order to further encourage the process of natural selection. Their diet is also very poor and not supplemented with hay or feeds. They eat whatever the land has to offer. To top it all up the local population often subjects the horses to rough handling.

The San Fratellano’s are very versatile being used in many disciplines including classical riding , 3DE, show jumping, driving and they are so docile that the stallions are also used as circus horses. Today there are only some 2000 of these horses left in the world and there is fear that they may become extinct soon. This situation has been the subject of meetings and conferences aimed at devising a suitable breeding programme so that the San Fratellano breed could retain its identity. Unfortunately, every year the majority of colts are culled when they reach the age of 12 to 18 months in order to allow only the best ones to reproduce and this practice is also having the unwanted side-effect of restricting the genetic pool with the consequent danger of inbreeding and forced line breeding. Thanks to the promotional activities and the financial support of the local Council during the past two years it seems that extinction of this breed of horses may not be imminent, however there is still a lot of work to be done.

First of all, it has been deemed necessary to find "a use" for the San Fratellano horses in today’s equestrian world. Now that horses are no longer used for wars or to plough the land or even purely as a mean of transport, competition seems to be the natural outlet even for these horses. For this reason two 3 year old stallions have recently been given to one of Italy’s top classical riders in order for him to train them to the highest levels of dressage and develop the breed’s innate athleticism. The San Fratellano is nowadays often cross bred with thoroughbreds or warmbloods and sometimes even with Spanish horses, although the original nucleus, the pure breds, are being jealously treasured and are seldom sold for profit making purposes. It goes without saying that the economic future of the local population, which is already a rather difficult and complicated matter, is strictly linked to the success of the current promotion of the breed.

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