Horses and Monks

Threepennyjane writes about riding Cappi, what with Doc having been semi-retired. The big surprise for me is learning that Cappi isn’t his actual entire name, but that it’s short for Cappuccino (or Cappucino as it’s spelled in the photo from the barn or the tack room or wherever one hangs saddles).

So then I wonder what the heck a cappuccino is, besides being the familiar coffee drink. Does it have anything to do with horses? First off, it sounds like it’s the diminutive form of something, which something I guess is capucin. Although beats me what a capucin is. I think maybe it’s like a chevalier or some other European martial character.

But then again, the cheval- part of chevalier refers to the horse itself. So then maybe the capucin- part is a horse reference in and of itself? It could be simply that the horse himself is the color of cappuccino, and maybe this is another instance where I’ve just gone off the deep end, similar to the Jane Connell/Threepenny Opera fiasco.

It turns out that I’m confused, as usual, in all sorts of ways. A Capuchin is a member of a particular Franciscan order. Monastic, not martial. And the name come from their hooded robes, cappuccio in Italian. I’m still not sure where the coffee comes into play, unless that refers to the color of the robes.

3 thoughts on “Horses and Monks

  1. “Cappucino as it’s spelled in the photo from the barn or the tack room or wherever one hangs saddles….” Let’s be fair, that’s a lot of letters in a limited space. Kangaroo gets to be just Roo on his gear, not to be confused with Roosevelt, who gets squinchy lettering.

    No idea how Cappi got his name. I’m still bitter that Max the Halflinger, who looks so much like a scaled-down draft horse, didn’t get dubbed Halfpint (did you smoke it, Stephen?). Likewise, Bennie Fluff is a strange choice for a former carthorse (although he is in fact about as sweet a horse as I’ve ever met), Teddy Bear Bill is a weird name period, and Princess is both dull and wrong for the huge drafty young mare who looks like a tank. I suspect that the logic of the moppet is behind many of the names.

  2. Prince? God help us, horses with gender issues. (Which, er, does happen. Trust me that you don’t want details.)

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