Bhirum Pony
The Bhirum pony is a little-documented West African horse type, most often associated with Nigeria's central highlands and the Berom or Birom communities around the Jos Plateau. It is better understood as a regional landrace than as a closed, show-standard breed. Like other local ponies of the savanna and plateau country, it was shaped by village transport, riding, packing, and the need for a small, hardy animal that could work where larger horses were costly to maintain.
Information on modern numbers and pure populations is limited, so ownership and breeding usually depend on local knowledge rather than international pedigrees. Practical management centers on sound feet, tolerance of heat, seasonal forage, and control of parasites and insect-borne disease. For conservation or research projects, the useful work is often documentation: recording where these ponies remain, how communities use them, and which traits distinguish them from neighboring Nigerian horse types.
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