Mountain brumbies now have the run of grassy Currango Plain in Kosciuszko National Park.
Photo Credit: Jason Edwards
Considered by some to be a pest, brumbies also hold an important place in Australia’s history, culture and mythology.
Photo Credit: Jason Edwards
Cool year-round temperatures and summer snowmelt sustain lush grassy plains and whispering creeks in Kosciuszko National Park, making an ideal environment for brumbies.
Photo Credit: Jason Edwards
Wild horses or feral pests? Galloping across our continent, brumbies polarise opinion like few other introduced animals.
Photo Credit: Jason Edwards
Wild horses have been etched into the Australian psyce by writers such as Elyne Mitchell (The Silver Brumby) and Banjo Paterson (The Man from Snowy River and Brumby’s Run).
Photo Credit: Jason Edwards
Dominant stallions defend their mares and offspring, and sport numerous battle scars.
Photo Credit: Jason Edwards
High Country cattleman Peter Cochran is a staunch supporter of wild horses.
Photo Credit: Jason Edwards
Wild horses can travel vast distances to water or feed. “I think it is the ability to adapt to different environments, temperatures and food availability that has allowed horses to spread across the country,” says ecologist Dr Magdalena Zabek, who has studied wild horses in Central Australia and southern Queensland.
Photo Credit: Jason Edwards
Australia’s brumbies are known for their keen eyesight and hearing, and have slightly shorter necks and backs than domestic breeds.
Photo Credit: Jason Edwards
Most people agree Australia’s wild horse population needs to be reined in, especially in the more heavily populated and politically sensitive south-east. The question is how and by how much.
Photographer Jason Edwards flew by helicopter into some of the least accessible parts of Kosciuszko National Park to observe Australia’s wild horses, called brumbies, and their impact on the river systems and plains. Find the full story in the Jan/Feb issue (#130) of Australian Geographic.