Our Ranch

miniature horses grazing
miniature horses grazing

Little America is a family owned and operated miniature horse farm located in central Texas on rolling hills at the eastern edge of the famed Texas Hill Country. We are eighteen miles from the state capitol in Austin and less than one hour north of the beautiful river walk and famed Alamo of San Antonio. We are conveniently located just three miles east of Interstate 35 and welcome prospective buyers by appointment.  I am sorry, but we no longer offer public tours.  It got to where they were just too many and too time consuming.  You can usually see lots of horses if you pull over in front of our property and you can take a virtual tour on our website LittleAmericaMinis.com.  Every horse is pictured with information, plus lots of  general information about the breed, shows and more.

 

 

 

 

 

We purchased our current location almost 30 years ago and adapted the  facilities to house our growing herd of minis, which boasts the nation’s largest herd of the smallest miniature horses with over eighty head standing 30” and under. We have visitors from coast to coast as well as international customers from France, Mexico, Belgium, Scotland, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Costa Rica, Canada, and Australia to name a few. When people are searching the finest and tiniest, they are usually directed to us from people worldwide.

Little America miniature horse ranch front gate
Little America entrance

Our many years of experience with miniatures has proven to be an asset to our customers. Twenty-four hours a day, we carry through on that promise, whether it is consulting on feeding, showing, treating a horse that is colicky, or a mare in foal. Our customers become part of the Little America family.

People are amazed when shopping our many pastures when Tony not only knows each of the horses by name but can usually quote their background and pedigree verbatim. Lauren says that he is Google for the world of miniature horses!

If you are in the central Texas area, and in the market for a miniature horse, use our site to plan which miniature horses you want to see in person and call for an appointment.  General tours are not offered. Our Thursday Kids program which started in 2008 has been retired after fourteen fun years.  We are still showing and miss them very much.

pasture miniature horse herd white fence pasture and pond
Little America ranch view of pasture and pond

Our Family

Tony and his dad

The Greaves Family and horses are almost synonymous. When Tony was born, his family was raising Shetland ponies and his granddad had horses before that. Of course previous to that, everyone who lived in the country depended on horses for transportation and for work. According to Tony’s mother, he learned to walk by holding the halter of his first pony. Tony couldn’t say “dappled filly,” calling her “Daffy,” and it stuck. Daffy was his pony who he rode and drove until he went away to college.

Tony, his dad and a Shetland Pony

People ask, “Why miniatures?” When Tony was in elementary school he had a “funny book” (later called “comic book”) about Bozo the Clown in which Bozo had a circus with animals so small that they were carried around in a briefcase and performed on a table top. Tony said, “That’s the size of animals that I want.” He hasn’t gotten them that small yet, but has certainly made headway with our smallest horse being 24”.

Tony and a Shetland Pony

Our first miniature-sized pony was born in the spring of 1963, just months before Tony graduated from high school. While in college, Tony told his dad to keep Big Un, that first miniature, as long as he had land and horses. For many years, Big Un was a teaser for Flight 8 Farms, the Greaves family’s Quarter Horse ranch. When the American Miniature Horse Association (AMHA) was founded in 1978, Big Un became our first registered miniature, fifteen years old and 31 inches tall.

Carol and Tony with race horse in 1974

After college and graduate school and a time performing in New York, Tony, Carol, and their daughter Lisa, returned to Texas to run Flight 8 Farms (Quarter Horse stud farm) for his family. During that time he started searching for miniature mares to accompany Big Un, who was still the teaser for all the Quarter Horse mares. While searching, Tony renewed friendship with his family’s friends Vern and Betty Brewer with whom he made several mini hunting trips. During one of those trips, Vern, Betty, and Tony discovered a future miniature legend, Orion-Light Van’t Huttenest.

Tony bought several small herds of miniatures during the growth phase of building the ranch, which the first few years was known as Flight 8, then Greaves’ Miniature Horses. Eventually, Carol came up with the name “Little America” and it stuck.

Lauren in ’89

Fourteen years after Lisa was born, our second daughter, Lauren, was born and we gave her a filly. From that grew Lauren’s part of the herd, which usually numbers between twenty and thirty head. Lauren started showing when she was three and continues to this day with the same love for showing that her dad has. While she was in high school, we put together A Mini Memoir for her English class, a fun read about both of us growing up with horses.

Lauren with Babydoll in 1992

We have two grandchildren and continuing the tradition, they were each given a filly the day after they were born. Our grandson, Grayson’s first miniature was Little America’s D S Grayson’s Girl and our granddaughter Ella’s was Little America’s Terrific Gabriella. Both mares are progeny of our first really tiny mare, Crescent’s Melodee, who their mother, Lisa, showed when she was a little girl. Unfortunately, our grandchildren live in New York, but they enjoy their horses when they visit Texas: A Day With Grandaddy.

So you see that we are not just in miniatures because of a current fad, but because of a multi-generational love of horses.

Lisa Bryan Grayson Taylor miniature horses minis
Bryan, Grayson and Lisa with the horses
teenager on ground miniature horses circling her minis texas
Lauren with the Horses

Little America Advertisements Over the Years