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Hundreds of Icelandic Horses Buried in Worst Snowstorm in Decades

© AP Photo / Michael ProbstTwo Iceland stallions play in a paddock of a stud in Wehrheim near Frankfurt, Germany, Friday, Nov. 22, 2019
Two Iceland stallions play in a paddock of a stud in Wehrheim near Frankfurt, Germany, Friday, Nov. 22, 2019 - Sputnik International
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Dozens of Icelandic horses traditionally kept outside for lack of stables have perished in last week’s storm. Many of the surviving animals suffer from extreme exhaustion.

A heavy snowstorm that swept across Iceland last week has buried hundreds of Icelandic horses left outside. More than 80 horses have been found dead, and over 100 are still missing due to conditions veterinarians called unprecedented, the news outlet Iceland Review reported.

In December, Iceland was hit by three severe snow blizzards. At least 42 centimetres of snow has fallen around Reykjavik, which is the largest amount of snow since 1937. The storm hit Iceland's population of roughly 100,000 horses, who are kept outdoors even during wintertime the worst.

Following extreme weather conditions last week, the fate of over one hundred horses in Northwestern Iceland remains unknown. In the past days, local rescue organisations received dozens of calls concerning horses.

“There was no way to reach these horses for two or three days. The horses were completely out of sight. In such conditions, there’s nothing you can do, the horses were without food or water for all this time”, Sigríður Björnsdóttir a veterinarian at the Icelandic Food and Veterinary Authority (MAST) stated. Based on her 25-year experience, she called the storm the most fatal natural disaster for Iceland’s horses in decades.

Публикация от Horses of Iceland (@horsesoficeland)

As the storm was uniquely devastating, she contested that farmers can't be faulted for failing to take appropriate measures.

“This is happening to experienced people. It isn’t a question of negligence. It’s simply the result of unprecedented weather conditions”, Sigríður Björnsdóttir said.

Ingunn Reynisdóttir, a fellow veterinarian, described local farmers as downhearted and exhausted, both physically and mentally.

“They are just completely spent, and to make matters worse, they’ve been accused of animal cruelty by the media”, she said.

According to Björnsdóttir, keeping horses outside is a tradition that is unlikely to change. Keeping the animals inside is not an option for the lack of stables. Icelandic horses have been kept outside ever since the country was settled in the late 800s. Most Icelandic horses are still kept in the open all year round, with the exception of riding horses.

“The Icelandic horse has lived in Icelandic nature for centuries and is especially well suited to the outdoors all year round. The main benefit of being outside is freedom, where the horse’s natural behaviour goes unimpeded. The horses diet is often times more diverse if they are kept outside, enabling the horses to better regulate their body temperatures, as they have a thick winter coat”, MAST said.

​Meanwhile, up to nine meters of snow fell in northern Iceland, burying entire houses.

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