The advocates have until the end of the year to take the herd from 274 to 243 according to a story by KPHO News.
That would require a death rate of nearly 12%.
274 × (1 – .12) = 241
Although the death rate is increasing along with the average age of the herd (because few if any new foals are hitting the ground), it’s not enough to achieve the goal.
The first step would be to mend fences with Jackie Hughes and bring her into the fold.
Then develop a plan for capture, removal and placement into private care, just like the roundups they’ve always condemned.
Was this post written by a woman who sees the world not as it is but the way she thinks it should be?
Or maybe she reached her conclusion after watching herds where mares can’t be mares and the natural order has been disrupted by massive human involvement?
The mass sterilization program will continue but the advocates will add motorized removal to their repertoire.
The current population is 274 according to a story by Phoenix New Times and the new target is 120.
To reach that number they will relocate 25 horses a year to sanctuaries.
The article said the group is actively seeking land or leases near the Salt River but did not indicate if they planned to attach them to vacant allotments in the forest—which would give their supporters more value for their investment.
As of today, AZDA has not announced the agreement at its news site.
The Decision Record authorizes Alternative A, the Proposed Action, minus the IUDs and surgical sterilization.
The selected alternative, discussed in section 2.3 of the Final EA, also includes forcible removal to low AML, fertility control treatments and sex ratio skewing.
Sixty to seventy percent of travelers interviewed by the author of a new book point to Oatman as one of their favorite stops according to a story by KPNX News.
The report did not indicate if any visitors had been kicked by the burros.
The article about the Black Mountain WHT included a section about Return to Normal (Before WHB Act), a signatory to the “Path Forward,” and the sanctuaries it operates.
In the space of a few paragraphs, fertility control is mentioned five times.
RTF ringleader Neda DeMayo said the horses live as they’re designed to live—except for one minor detail.
She’s been pummeling the mares with a “non-hormonal, reversible birth control vaccine,” referred to on these pages as an ovary-killing pesticide, since 1999.
The stallion died of natural causes. He was not one of the top producers in 2025.
The mare slipped on ice and broke her neck.
The report by WBOC News did not indicate if any foals had been born in 2026.
Known for its abnormal sex ratio and unprecedented birth rate, the saltwater cowboys have engineered the herd for maximum revenue at the annual pony swim and auction.
The herd is so small that it’s in danger of becoming extinct according to an article by the New Times of San Luis Obispo.
A retired ranger from the Los Padres National Forest, home of the WHT, said she’s recommending and hoping that the Forest Service lets it die out.
Western Horse Watchers was unable to find a map of the territory but believes it’s located at the northern end of the Santa Lucia Ranger District based on remarks about a radar dome on page 45 (55 in the pdf) of the land management plan for the forest.
The WHT is not subject to permitted grazing.
The Forest Service does not post AOIs for neighboring allotments so it’s not possible to determine if the target stocking rate (20 horses on 13,3215 public acres) is reasonable.
Objective LG 3 in the management plan says the WHT remains suitable and sustainable over the long term but that was from 2005.
Despite cancellation of the AIP, 8,080 animals were placed into private care last year, up 20% from FY24, according to a BLM blog post.
The report did not indicate how many animals were removed from public lands during the same period and if the off-range inventory was rising or falling.