Dun and Solovy Orlovtsev can be seen very rarely.
Uncomplicated and gloomy, they lost to the noble appearance of Orlovtsev.
Orlovtsev heads are rather large,
slightly elongated, with a beautiful, chiseled profile.
The Russian trotter(sometimes also called Orlovtsev) has an easygoing temper,
most often these trotting horses are very calm.
From 54813 horses in 1985, the Orlovtsev livestock dropped to a critical number of 800 by 1997.
Orlovtsev began to breed throughout the country,
the best representatives were imported overseas to the United States and Europe.
Among the most famous Orlovtsev Soviet period-
Peony and his son, Cowboy, records, which are not beaten to this day.
The time shown by Krepysh was very high agility for a four-year-old trotter, even for a half-breed,
since the record for the four-year-old Orlovtsev at that time was 2 minutes 17 seconds.
However, the Americans had what allowed them not only to survive in the Russian outback,
but also to outshine the glory of Orlovtsev- these horses were far superior
to others in speed and endurance.