Cotentin Donkey
The Cotentin Donkey or i=no is a French breed of domestic donkey from the Cotentin peninsula, in the département of la Manche, in the Lower Normandy Region of north-west France. It is found mostly in that region, but is distributed through much of north-western France. It was in the past used as a pack animal in agricultural work, mainly for carrying milk churns; it is now used in leisure sports and tourism. The breed was recognised by the i=no, the French ministry of agriculture, in 1997. The stud-book is kept by the i=no, an association of breeders.
History
Donkeys are documented in the Cotentin from the sixteenth century. In the 1930s there were donkeys in the département of la Manche. Numbers dwindled with the mechanisation of agriculture in the period after the Second World War, but less rapidly than in some other breeds, and in 1960 there were still in the Manche. A breeders' association, the italic=no, was formed in 1995; since 1997, when the breed was officially recognised by the agriculture ministry and the Haras Nationaux, the association has kept the stud-book for the breed.The Cotentin Donkey is raised mainly in Lower Normandy, but is also found in more than half the départements of France, mostly in the north-west. Numbers were estimated at in 2001. In 2011 there were 107 breeders, and 140 new registrations in the stud-book, approximately a quarter of all new donkey registrations in that year.