Bali Pony
Small, tough, and locally adapted, the Bali pony is an Indonesian horse type from the island of Bali. It belongs to the wider network of Southeast Asian pony populations shaped by trade, island agriculture, and local transport. The Bali pony is generally compact, strong for its size, and better suited to carts, pack work, and short-distance riding than to large sport-horse jobs. Coat colors vary, and conformation is practical rather than highly uniform. Its traditional value has been thrift, agility, and the ability to work in a hot, humid environment where feed quality may be seasonal.
Today Bali ponies may be kept by families, small farms, riding operators, or cultural tourism businesses, which makes welfare standards and workload management especially important. Clean water and shade are nonnegotiable, and tack fit matters because small backs are easily made sore. Routine hoof and dental care still apply, even where management is simple. Exported animals are uncommon, so people researching the breed should expect local variation and limited formal pedigree information. Responsible breeding favors sound legs, calm handling, and stamina over simply producing a very small pony.
Colors: Amber Champagne, Bay, Bay Dun, Bay Roan, Black, Blanket Appaloosa, Blue Roan, Brown, Buckskin, Champagne, Chestnut, Classic Champagne, Cremello, Dun, Dun Roan, Fewspot Appaloosa, Flaxen Chestnut, Frame Overo, Gold Champagne, Gray, Grey, Grullo, Leopard Appaloosa, Liver Chestnut, Overo, Palomino, Perlino, Piebald, Pinto, Rabicano, Red Dun, Red Roan, Roan, Sabino, Seal Bay, Silver Dapple, Skewbald, Smoky Black, Smoky Cream, Snowcap Appaloosa, Sorrel, Splash White, Tobiano, Tovero, Varnish Roan, White