Equine Ambassadors for the College of Ag: Pistol and Pete Celebrate 10 Years at UW

Like many educational institutions, the University of Wyoming champions new innovations and discoveries. But UW has a unique respect for keeping traditional technologies alive, too.

In 2016, UW acquired a team of Haflinger horses dubbed Pistol and Pete. For the past 10 years, Pistol and Pete have served as ambassadors for UW’s College of Agriculture, Life Sciences and Natural Resources. The two horses make appearances at parades, field days, campus celebrations, and many other events. They also haul food to farm animals and help students across the state learn about horses.

“Their purpose is to promote agriculture, education, extension, and teaching, but also give a name to a face and a point of contact when it comes to our history, what agriculture is in this state, and why it’s so important to us,” says Elias Hutchinson, Pistol and Pete’s teamster and assistant farm manager of the Laramie Research and Extension Center.

Pistol and Pete were first brought to UW as a celebration of the Wyoming Agricultural Experiment Station’s 125th anniversary.

The Wyoming Agricultural Experiment Station (WAES) is dedicated to conducting research throughout the state to help Wyoming communities thrive. At WAES research and extension centers, researchers study everything from drought tolerance in field peas to rangeland management to pesticide usage.

Pistol and Pete live at one of WAES’ four research hubs, the Laramie Research and Extension Center (LREC).

Haflinger lingo

The original Pistol and Pete were in their late teens when they arrived at UW. They were Amish horses accustomed to farmwork. The current team began training in 2018 and fully took over for the old team in 2020.

Kids walk across a parking lot holding pumpkins.
Pistol and Pete help students at the former Beitel Elementary school celebrate fall by handing out pumpkins in the fall of 2018. This is one of many community outreach events that Pistol and Pete take part in.

Haflingers are a versatile breed of horse that can vary in their appearance. UW’s first Pistol and Pete were shorter and stockier. The current Pistol and Pete are taller than their predecessors and have the refined, arched neck characteristic of Arabian horse breeds.

Haflingers were initially developed as farming horses in Germany. They may have been bred to be ridden and plow fields, but these days, Pistol and Pete excel at pulling a carriage in Jubilee Days parades.

But Pistol and Pete are not just parade animals. Throughout the year, they help feed livestock at LREC. The team spends many winter mornings hauling hay to hungry sheep and cattle.

The team’s adaptability lends itself well to a university context. UW is one of the few universities in the U.S. with a teamster club. A “teamster” is the person driving a team of horses. Every year, about 15 to 20 UW students work with Pistol and Pete at various events—helping push the wagon in and out of the trailer, showing kids how to pet the horses, and even driving the team themselves.

Pistol and Pete even participate in animal science classes at UW, allowing students to learn about equine care, behavior, and feeding. Along the way, some students have gotten to know Pistol and Pete’s distinct personalities.

Meet Pistol

Pistol makes up his mind and then sticks with his opinion. If he doesn’t want to go over a pothole, he’ll steer the whole carriage—and his friend Pete—around it. “I call him a coward,” says Hutchinson, “but he’s really afraid of nothing.” Rather, he’s simply opinionated and straightforward. 

Hutchinson describes Pistol’s personality as “business, business, business.” In the harness, Pistol is focused on his job—parading gracefully while hauling a carriage.

Pistol is a little shorter than Pete, and he is the younger of the two horses by a year. This year, he turned 10.

Meet Pete

Pistol and Pete pull a carriage through the outskirts of Laramie, by a gas station.
Pistol and Pete walk to town to take part in graduation 2025.

Hutchinson calls Pete the “class clown” of the duo. As a colt, Pete was energetic and social, always wanting to nicker at other horses to invite them to play.

Despite Pete’s class-clown personality, the horse is usually at Hutchinson’s trusted left side. “He and I have a lot of history,” says Hutchinson. After years of working with his teamster, Pete is reliable and consistent.

In 2023, Pete got cancer behind his left eye. He is now blind in that eye.

At first, Hutchinson tried driving Pete with his good eye on the outside, so he could watch for obstacles, but Pete kept getting distracted trying to find Pistol. Nowadays, Pete’s good eye stays trained on the middle of the road, with Pistol in view.

“They do all that they do even though one of them has no depth perception,” comments Hutchinson.

By the numbers

  • For parades in Laramie, Pistol and Pete often walk all the way from LREC. It’s four miles into town, four miles back—on top of the event itself. Talk about getting your steps in!
  • In a year, Pistol and Pete carry weight equivalent to about seven to eight busloads of kids—including the bus.
  • Pistol and Pete star in about 25 to 30 events every year, including 8 to 10 parades. These Haflingers are hard workers!

The next 10 years

In the next decade, Pistol and Pete, along with their friend Cowboy Joe, will move into a renovated barn out at LREC.

The current Haflinger team will likely keep appearing at parties, fairs, and field days for another 10 years. Meanwhile, a third Pistol and Pete team could begin their ambassador training at UW by 2030.

“It’s no small deal that [UW] chooses to prioritize that tradition,” says Hutchinson. “We choose to do it the old way, and we choose to bring that tradition back and keep it alive.”


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