Hirzai
The Hirzai is a lightly documented horse associated with Balochistan in Pakistan, especially the drier country where local riding and military horses had to cover distance on sparse feed. It is generally described as a saddle type rather than a heavy farm horse, with a practical frame, endurance, and enough substance for riders, pack work, and local transport. References to the Hirzai often overlap with regional horse-breeding history, so it is safer to treat it as a local or regional type than as a highly standardized international breed.
Human use of the Hirzai has centered on travel, riding, and working needs in arid and semi-arid conditions. A horse from such lines should be assessed as an individual, with attention to sound legs, heat tolerance, foot quality, and temperament, because formal registry information may be thin or inconsistent. For breeders and conservation-minded owners, the main value is documenting genuine regional ancestry and preserving useful traits without overstating purity or uniformity.
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