Last Friday was a great day for watching horses on the Virginia Range. You normally don’t see this many together in an area of just 25 to 30 acres. Almost all heads were down, they did not seem to be put off by my presence.








Western Horse Watchers Association
Exposing the Hypocrisy, Lies and Incompetence of the Wild Horse Advocates
Last Friday was a great day for watching horses on the Virginia Range. You normally don’t see this many together in an area of just 25 to 30 acres. Almost all heads were down, they did not seem to be put off by my presence.








Video of auction of BLM mustangs at 2018 Western States Horse Expo. Where else are you going to get a saddle-started horse for $300? On the other hand, the purchase price will seem small compared to the amount you’ll spend over his life. Not to mention all the work…
You can also get inmate-trained mustangs through the Northern Nevada Correctional Center partnership with the BLM. You can read about the last adoption here. Next one set for 10/20/18.
If the video does not load, you can view it here. H/T Friends of R3C.
This band, consisting of one stallion and four mares, was photographed on the Virginia Range 06/15/18. Stallion on the right, no youngsters present.

Closer inspection revealed two mares with welts on their right flanks.


Bruises from getting kicked? Doubt it.
Insect bites? Possibly.
Handiwork of the PZP zealots? Who knows.
There were other bands with foals, why not these guys?

Virginia Range mustangs catch some Zs on 06/15/18, while others stand watch.



A few more photos from Opening Day of the 2018 Western States Horse Expo. See you next year!








See this report in the Mohave Valley Daily News dated 06/16/18. No reason was given for the gather or the number of animals to be removed.

Bullhead City lies to the west of the Black Mountain HMA, but does fall within the Black Mountain HA, a space where WHB are not managed by the BLM because the land doesn’t have the resources to sustain them. Go figure.
The Black Mountain HMA is noted for the panhandlers in Oatman, who work the tourists on a 9-to-5 basis.
So says a report in the Arizona Daily Sun dated 06/15/18. Normally, a story like that would get the goodbye click upon reaching such a claim, but there is a problem here.

Horses don’t stand around on dry lots and die of thirst. Maybe somebody put up a fence or other obstruction that impedes their ability to find food and water?
Anyway, when this story broke a few weeks ago, little if any effort was being made to help them. But now the advocates have mobilized. It’s the locals helping the horses, not the government.
What an individual can do, society should not take over, and what small societies can do, larger societies should not take over.
That is the principle of subsidiarity.
If you didn’t follow the link to Barnhardt’s post on meekness, at least watch the damn video.
Today we reject the new-age ideals of effeminacy, promiscuity and single-parent families, along with the horrific practice of placing children with same-sex couples.
A father stands up for what’s right, protects what’s his, and has the scars to prove it.
The stallion below, who runs one of the bands on the Virginia Range, doesn’t keep his harem of mares because he’s a nice guy, he keeps them because he’s a badass. Photo taken 06/15/18.

One of the Virginia Range band stallions, photographed on 06/15/18, battle scars and and all. That’s 1000 pounds of virility and potency standing right in front of you. If he spins his butt and fires those cannons, you don’t have a chance. But there he was, as sweet as can be.
This may be an example of what Ann Barnhardt refers to as meekness.

A behind-the-scenes look at one of the workstations at WHWA. Yep, three grain buckets and a notebook in one of the corrals. Horses enjoy some oats and rice bran while your host enjoys some hops. Photo taken 06/12/18 while working on post about water shortage at Sand Wash Basin HMA.

Personnel with the Salt River Wild Horse Management Group held a press conference recently to review their plans for the Salt River horses. A birth control program was included, of course, with the goal of reducing population growth.
If anything positive can be said about it, at least it’s not aimed at zero population growth or negative population growth.
The contraceptive-of-choice will likely be PZP, administered by CO2-powered rifles. Or maybe they’re using compressed air nowadays because of global warming.

The wild horse haters are almost certainly pleased with the development, as this so-called advocacy group works diligently to advance their agenda of fewer horses on western rangelands.
In the 12/12/17 Nevada Board of Agriculture meeting, where a decision was made to transfer ownership of the Virginia Range horses to a private advocacy group, comments were made about the side-effects of PZP (beginning at 2:32:00 in the video).
Why don’t we ever hear about these things?
The speaker was shouted down by individuals who are so lost in their sins (the contraceptive mindset) that they can’t even conceive of other pro-life methods for managing the horses.
Wild Horses and burros will be available for adoption today and tomorrow at the National Cattle Congress in Waterloo, IA. Refer to this report in the Black Hills Pioneer, posted 06/14/18.
Event will be held at the Pullin Simonsen Arena.
Posters! Maybe?
Fulton J. Sheen on politeness.
Saddle-trained mustangs will be available for adoption this weekend at Napa Mustang Days according to a news release dated 06/14/18 in the The Union.
Mustangs trained by inmates at the Rio Cosumnes Correctional Center were offered for adoption last weekend at the Western States Horse Expo in Sacramento, CA.
BLM wild horse posters may be available at this event.
Volunteers at the BLM booth at the Western States Horse Expo were handing out posters featuring these icons of the American west. They’re approximately 18″ x 24″ in size, with thick stock and glossy finish. Really nice.
Unfortunately, they’re only available at BLM-related events or shows where the BLM sponsors a booth. Leave a comment if you’re interested in getting these.


See this story at KIVI-TV Channel 6, the ABC affiliate in Boise, ID. Includes video.
Today, twenty nine horses were returned to this relatively small HMA, almost three years after it was burned in the Soda Fire. Also present were 100+ observers.
The population density for this area is 5.5 horses per thousand acres, considerably higher than the national average of about one horse per thousand acres (based on upper end of AML).
RELATED: BLM Returning Horses to Sands Basin HMA.
BLM says no. See this report in Steamboat Today posted 06/13/18. Although ponds are drying up, springs are flowing and wells are pumping. So it’s wait and see. No immediate threat to horses, for now they appear to be OK. Situation monitored daily.
Refer to this story in the Telluride Daily Planet, posted 06/12/18. Known as ‘Mustang Maddy’ in the horse world, she appeared on the cover of the May/June issue of Cowgirl magazine.
Her FB page includes a video dedicated to mustangs.
See also this article in Cowgirl about her work with wild horses.