Colt pixie


A colt pixie is a creature from English folklore in Southern England and South West England. According to local mythology, it is a type of Pixie which takes the form of a scruffy, pale horse or pony to lead travellers and other livestock astray, and is often associated with Puck. Erasmus's 16th century translation Apophthegmatum opus includes the line: "I shall be ready at thine elbow to plaie the parte of Hobgoblin or Collepixie."
The phrase "as ragged as a colt pixie" was common in the New Forest at least as recently as the early 20th century. In the dialect of Dorset "to colt-pixy" meant to beat down the remaining apples after a crop has been harvested, i.e. to take the colts' horde.

Colloquial survivals