#185 Buckskin Mare with Native American Markings.
To Win this girl. Tell me a story about her tribe.
To Win this girl. Tell me a story about her tribe.
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Username:
Name:
Age:
Gender: Female
Eye Color: Blue
Story:
Username: Isabella45
Name: Awinita (Native American for fawn)
Age: 6 years
Gender: Female
Eye Color: Blue
Story:
Awinita's tribe is known for their horses. But she never knew why. The horses of the tribe were fairly common and of smaller, stockier build than some. The horses of the Nez perce were infinitely prettier, and the horses of other tribes swifter, and larger. She had heard one man say it was the loyalty and devotion of the horses that earned their masters such respect. Awinita thought it to be untrue, surely loyalty and devotion were seen in many horses.
Then, one day, while Awinita was grazing with some other mares, a woman was picking plants with her young child nearby. Not knowing that a snake lay coiled up in the grass nearby. The women didn't see the snake slither up to her child, but her mare did. The mare whinnied shrilly and darted between the child and the snake, rearing and pawing at the air. The snake seemed surprised and slithered off. The women cried with relief, then she threw her arms around Awinita's neck, hugging her tightly and thanking her. Awinita watched silently. She knew that snakes were very dangerous and most horses turned tail at the sight of one, but this mare had just risked her own life for that of the tiny child. It was then that she realized why loyalty and devotion were so important to the Native tribes. A pretty horse or a swift horse were both worthy of admiration, but a horse who was willing to give his or her own life to save their master was a treasure far more valuable.