Benefits of Wild Horses

If you’re a numbers guy, this article in NorCal Fishing News, dated 08/26/18, will make you smile.  (Not sure how it got into a fishing report, might be a reprint of figures published elsewhere.)

The video below shows some vegetation on the side of a road in the Virginia Range near sunset on 08/24/18.

You might think somebody took a sickle to that brush but the work was done by wild horses.  Remaining stalks are about six inches tall, no trimmings to clean up.  It’s nature’s fire control regimen.

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See also this story in Markets Insider dated 08/23/18.

The article also stated that the BLM typically allows eight cow/calf pairs per square mile, equivalent to eight wild horses per square mile.  That yields a stocking rate for livestock of 12.5 animals per thousand acres, compared to an aimed-at population density of one animal per thousand acres for horses on BLM lands.

Who benefits from this arrangement?  Is this what Congress intended on lands set aside for wild horses and burros or is it a twisting and stretching of ‘multiple use’ by the BLM, on behalf of the livestock industry?  Is this the meaning of ‘thriving ecological balance?’

The figures at the end of the article hint at the idea of replacing AMLs with pie charts that show how resources are allocated among consumers on HMAs.

A Simple Experiment in Diversionary Watering

Trailcam hasn’t picked up any Virginia Range mustangs last few weeks, so I put out two stock tanks and filled them with water on 08/10/18.  They found them that evening!

The idea is to keep the horses up in the hills and away from populated areas.

Bait traps use the same concept.  Put out some food and water but enclose the area with a pipe panel fence and attach the gate to a trip wire.  See the video at this post.

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Best Way to See the Pryor Mountains Horses

A detailed article posted recently in Just Horse Crazy provides some background on the Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range, along with recommendations for viewing the horses.  It’s pretty much everything you need to know.  The drive into the mountains should not be attempted without a 4WD vehicle.

The PMWHR is one of just three areas in the western U.S. devoted primarily to wild horses.  It may become the subject of a gather in early September, although the BLM has not formally announced it.

RELATED: Pryor Mountain Horses.

BLM Starts Emergency Gather at Spruce-Pequop

Bait traps will be used to remove approximately 300 wild horses from the Spruce-Pequop HMA, according to a news release issued yesterday.  The stated reason for the roundup is inadequate water and forage relative to the number of horses in the area.

Livestock are present on the HMA but were not mentioned in the announcement.

Gather operations will not be open to public inspection.

The HMA is on the south side of I-80 in eastern Nevada, about 40 miles south of the town of Wells.  It covers 240,744 acres and has an AML of 82, for an aimed-at population density of 0.34 horses per thousand acres.

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Captured animals will be taken to the Indian Lakes Off-Range Corral in Fallon, NV, where they will be checked by a veterinarian and prepared for adoption.

The announcement did not indicate if the horses would be available for sale (under the the new cash-and-carry rules).  Adoption is better for the horses.  You provide a foster home for a year.  You do the heavy lifting to prove your worthiness.  Then you get title.

Gather stats and daily reports can be found at this page.

Wild Horses in Oklahoma?

Sort of.  The text posted with the video suggests it’s part of the Drummond Ranch near Pawhuska, OK.  Probably an off-range pasture contracted to the BLM.  This is where the older/unadoptable horses end up.  Almost like being on the range…except there are no stallions, no bachelors, no foals, no families.  All mares in this case.

More info in this article.  H/T Sherryl Hannah.

RELATED: BLM Seeks Additional Off-Range Pastures for WHB.

WHB Adoption Next Month at Wyoming Honor Farm

BLM announced today that thirty saddle-started and halter-trained horses and burros will be offered for adoption at the Wyoming Honor Farm September 7 – 8.  Refer to this news release for details.  Photos will be posted to the BLM Wyoming FB page.

Gentling and training were provided by inmates at the facility, located about a mile north of Riverton, WY.

Events are free and open to anyone interested in wild horses and burros.  A training demonstration will occur on the 7th, with competitive bidding on the 8th.

WHB posters will probably be available somewhere on site.

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Case Against Man Who Rescued Foal Dismissed

A man from Placitas, NM, charged with unlawfully impounding a stray animal, appeared in court yesterday but the case was dropped.  The New Mexico Livestock Board could not prove that the foal was a stray or was found on public land.  See the story posted 08/22/18 by KRQE News in Albuquerque, NM.

The defendant operates the non-profit Placitas Animal Rescue and cares for cats, dogs and horses.

Sounds like the wild horses near Placitas are managed at the state level, like the Virginia Range mustangs near Reno, NV.

RELATED: Wild Horse Shares Road with Cyclist in Placitas, NM.

Red Desert Gather Ends Early

A BLM news release issued today indicates the Red Desert gather ended sooner than planned because the off-range corrals housing the animals had reached maximum capacity.  Of the 1442 horses removed from the range, 25 were returned and 10 died.

The announcement said horses were moving outside of HMAs, causing impacts in places not identified for their management.  Details were not provided.

A wild horse was euthanized on August 8 for a pre-existing condition and again on August 9 but the conditions were not explained.

A foal died in a temporary corral on August 12, cause of death undetermined.

Two horses were put down on August 13 for pre-existing conditions that were explained.

Captured animals will be available for adoption or purchase through the Wild Horse and Burro Program.  Animals not adopted or purchased will be placed in off-range pastures.

Gather stats and daily reports can be found on this page.

RELATED: Red Desert Gather Announced.

Virility and Potency in Action

Check out the photos of a cremello stallion defending his band in this article by the Daily Mail, dated 08/22/18.  The incident occurred in the western desert of Utah.

The photographer associated the stallion’s behavior with preparations for a roundup.

“Usually he keeps them farther away from the others but because water supplies have been drained in some locations as they get ready to do a round-up it meant they were all coming together in the same area.”

The location of the event was not provided in the story, but under what scenario would someone tamper with water sources for the horses?

A helicopter roundup?  Probably not.  So where are they bait-trapping in western Utah?

How about Cedar Mountain, near the Nevada border?

PTH Laments CSU Decision

A news release issued yesterday by Protect the Harvest blamed an unnamed ‘extremist’ group for persuading the folks at Colorado State University to withdraw from sterilization research on wild mares, calling the decision ‘disappointing.’

And rightfully so, because cutting ovaries out of wild horses is as mainstream as cutting unborn kids out of pregnant women.  Everybody does it.

Although many wild horse advocates filled out the computer-generated letter and sent it in, the driving force in the university changing its mind may have been just a few right-minded and highly influential people.

Can you spell e-n-d-o-w-m-e-n-t?

The folks at PTH, like the Clinton supporters on election night, can’t understand why some people—most people—don’t agree with the idea of ovariectomy via colpotomy.

Could it be the flow of mutilated ponies to the demonic futurity might be reduced?

Or is much more at stake?

Look at the list of the organizations in favor of sterilization.  Many are aligned with the livestock industry, cheerleaders for ranchers who fatten their cattle on public lands at fire-sale prices.

Gotta keep the gravy train rolling, reward the donors and political supporters, let more cattlemen suck on the sugar teat.  That means WHB populations must be reduced to AML, immediately, by sterilization or euthanasia.  Slaughter is another option.

A better approach would be to raise the grazing fee on public lands to $25 per AUM and require labels on beef that show where it was produced.  Educate the public on threats to our wild ones by public-lands ranchers and their allies at the BLM.  Admit the carrying capacity of the land is higher than publicly acknowledged and allow the horses to return to Herd Areas and beyond.

Put more land in private hands, waive property taxes on acreage purchased for sanctuaries and rescues, omit sales taxes on equipment and supplies procured therefor.

RELATED: CSU Withdraws from Wild Horse Sterilization Research.