Sixty years ago today, or possibly 59 if subsequent research into Decorators is wrong, Ponderosa came into my hands. He was a birthday present from my parents. I was 5 years old. There are mysteries here: For most of my collecting life I was fairly certain that I had gotten Ponderosa for my 6th birthday. Only in the last decade or so, reading other hobbyist's research, have I seriously wondered whether it could have been my 5th. Nineteen-sixty-six is pretty late for Decorators to be in stores. As a child, my sister and I had received a Decorator a good while before -- Gold Ear, the Florentine Fighting Stallion -- and while that argues for him to be for my 6th, it also could fit into the published statement that Breyer's Decorators came out in 1964, and, slow sellers as they were, some were left for 1965.
Whenever it happened, he certainly was for my birthday. And in the absence of solid evidence, perhaps we can forgive him, and me, one year in sixty.
His body bears the scars of those early years. Any horse that survived my childhood, and the first years of my model hobby, is going to be heavily marked. His leg is broken -- that happened on an elementary school playground. He is in fact branded -- only a few horses suffered this indignity, but as leader, he got the H-dash (the H stood for "horse," my favorite word). He carries the lessons that, perhaps, just perhaps, nail polish remover [acetone] was not the best medium for taking off black marks with.
On the positive side, he's no longer matte, as the Wedgewoods were originally. He's a fine example of what I call "hand shine," the semi-gloss appearance of a matte Breyer that has been handled so much, caressed and played with and hand-rubbed so much, that the surface takes on a beautiful sheen.
Sixty years is a long time, about the longest time any model horse has stayed with me. Entering the realm of solid evidence, with the below 1972 photograph we can document that only four horses still remain with me from then: Ponderosa, King, Tesoro the King's son, and Thomas the charcoal Fighter. If these photos are familiar, it's because they were part of my Braymere Winter Photo Challenge entry in 2015.
Thomas appears in another blog post: Tuning the piano
In this fantastic photo, we can see Ponderosa and twenty-five other models, my collection when I was twelve. [Technically 11 years 10 months.] Ponderosa is just to the left of the piano pedals, next to the elk. One appy FAF away from him is his wife, Pine, the Alabsater FAS. I admit, my grasp of the sex of models was squishy at that time; but also, I ask you, how's a horse supposed to be married when Breyer provided so few mares?! This Colorado child was pleased with the names' mild pun (Ponderosa Pine). I must have decided against Blue Spruce because I did not like spruce trees (so prickly!) half so much as the noble pine, the largest tree in the environment and one which smelled like butterscotch.
I can still rattle off their names. Starting from the right with the donkey, we have: Brighty, Charlie, Coppe, Cruella, Francis (the 5-Gaiter), Gueseppe, Joey (bay bucking bronco, down on all fours), Justin (the Morgan), Kiopo, Milwaukee, Misty (white Running Mare), Pawnee, Pine, Poison Ivy, Ponderosa, Ralph (the elk), Rebecca, Rontu, Rosy (the Smoke Belgian), Shag the Buffalo, Sheltie, Snowy, Sparkler (charcoal FAS), Spitnik, Thomas and Windy. Obviously I could think of no other way formal enough to arrange them than the alphabet.
Coppe is short for Copper, who later changed his name to Tesoro Cobre Rey, Spanish for Treasure Copper King. Only his forelegs show in the photo. Alas Pine is long gone. How I'd love to find that glossy with the acetone-whitened mane, but the odds are terrible. Poison Ivy was arguably my first horse, a fatneck with one broken leg replaced by a nail and others just broken, but his odds are even worse. Fifteen others from this photo have had themselves replaced, down through time, as Breyers can.
Ponderosa, over the years, has become the most magical, mystical, spiritual member of the herd: He is its shaman, its touchstone in time, its taproot and foundation stallion. He is the oldest Decorator in my possession, the only one obtained at the time of their 1960s release. No other Deco, no matter how acquired, can match that. I can remember opening his box at my birthday and being annoyed he wasn't a Copenhagen or Florentine. And yet, his beauty grew on me, and I never could let him go. In time I realized what an incredible prize he was. He belongs now in the class of family heirlooms, to be passed down to relatives or extremely close friends. I've always thought his expression was smiling and calm: He's a very knowing horse.
Today he spends his time under plastic sheeting, not very dignified to be sure, but safe from mold spores and dust. [Ed. note: Only matte finishes need this covering; glossies are proof against this particular mold.] He is always there, my oldest trace, and I have long since been forgiven for not liking him when he first appeared at that long-ago birthday party.
Thank you, Dad and Mom.