Horse Rich Dirt Poor

This film will be screened next week at the Nevada Museum of Art, according to a story posted yesterday by Carson Now.  A panel discussion involving land managers, wildlife scientists and wild horse advocates will follow.

Wild horses and burros have lost around 40% of the land that was set aside for them by the WHB Act of 1971.  The Act has been amended several times by ranching interests and no longer affords the protections sought by Velma.  The roundups and off-range holding facilities seen in the video reflect that reality.

Arrest in Arizona Ranch Horse Shooting Case

The White Mountain Independent of Show Low, AZ is reporting that a nineteen year old man has been taken into custody in connection with the shooting of two ranch horses near the Heber WHT.

Additional arrests are possible, according to the report.

A relationship to the Heber wild horse shootings has not been established and the investigation of that case is still in progress.

RELATED: Ranch Horses Found Dead Near Heber WHT.

UPDATE: Added video.

Clark Mountain Reward Increases to $100K

Return to Freedom said in a news release yesterday that additional funds have been pledged for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person(s) responsible for the shooting deaths of the Clark Mountain burros, bringing the reward to $100,500.

The latest pledge was made by the Roy Dunlap Spay & Neuter Foundation for $32,000.

The remains of 42 wild burros had been found on the Herd Area when the story broke in August, but since then four more dead animals have been discovered (not new, missed in the original count).

RELATED: Did the Clark Mountain Reward Yield Any Useful Information?

WHBAB Open Positions Filled

BLM said today that two new members were appointed to the national Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board, in the areas of wildlife management and humane advocacy, and a third person was reappointed to a position representing livestock management.

Refer to the news release for biographical details.

The group will meet in Washington, DC later this month.

RELATED: Nominations Sought for WHBAB.

What Do the AUM Numbers Tell You About an HMA?

Consider these data from Warm Springs HMA in southeast Oregon:

Warm Springs AUM Summary-1

What can you infer from these figures, omitting the portion for wildlife?

  • The AML is 202 (2,424 ÷ 12)
  • Privately owned livestock receive 89% of the forage (19,392 ÷  (2,424 + 19,392))
  • Wild horses receive 11% of the forage (2,424 ÷  (2,424 + 19,392))
  • Livestock receive eight times more forage than horses (19,392 ÷ 2,424)
  • The forage allocation for livestock would support 3,232 cow/calf pairs over a six month grazing season (19,392 ÷ 6)
  • The forage allocation for livestock would support 1,616 wild horses (19,392 ÷ 12)
  • The HMA can support 1,818 wild horses (202 + 1,616)
  • The AML represents 11% of the carrying capacity of the HMA (202 ÷ 1,818)

You don’t have a horse problem at Warm Springs HMA, you have a ranching problem.

RELATED: Warm Springs Horses Get Short End of Stick.

Cattle Grazing on Hill-1

Onaqui Mountain Roundup Ends with No News Release?

The gather ended on 09-19-19, according to the daily reports, with 241 excess horses removed from their home range.  Two deaths were reported (0.8%) and no animals were returned to the HMA.

Most of the body condition scores were fours and fives, not exactly what you’d expect for a herd that’s overpopulated.  A more plausible explanation is that they were robbing too much forage from the public-lands ranchers—on territory set aside for them.

RELATED: Onaqui Mountain Gather Starts on 9/11.

Where Did All the Horses Go-1

Invalid Conclusion from Recent Sterilization Survey?

The Animal Welfare Institute said today in a news release that 77% of Americans oppose sterilization experiments on wild horses by the BLM.

However, the disclaimer at the end of the announcement said the poll was not based on a probability sample, taken to mean that the persons responding were not selected at random from the population to which the inference was drawn.

What the study did establish is that 77% of 2,027 U.S. adults who responded to the survey oppose the BLM’s sterilization research.

The Greatest Threat to Public Lands is Public-Lands Ranching

Five areas were considered this week in a series of posts about the number of wild horses that have been displaced from public lands by privately owned livestock.

Yep, 8,127 wild horses have been denied a place on their home range by pro-ranching statutes and regulations of the federal government.

How many more HMAs would you have to look at to reach 50,000—the number of wild horses and burros languishing in off-range corrals and long-term pastures?

The government spends roughly $50 million every year to care for those animals, with the expectation of receiving just $12 million per year from the ranchers.

The ridiculous ‘Path Forward‘ will only make the situation worse.

There is no wild horse problem on western rangelands.

Public-lands ranching is rarely mentioned in news reports, such as this one, and most of allegations against the horses are aimed at getting them off the land—land that was set aside for them—so their food can be sold to the ranchers at fire-sale prices.

It’s a gravy train if ever there was one.

RELATED: Greatest Threat to Public Lands: Wild Horses and Burros.

Where Did All the Horses Go-1

Twin Peaks Quiz

A judge has ruled that the BLM cannot give itself power to decide which HMAs will be managed primarily for wild horses and burros, and that the ‘thriving ecological balance’ of the WHB Act refers to wildlife, not privately owned cattle and sheep.  With livestock coming off the Twin Peaks HMA at the end of the grazing season, by how much can the AML be increased?

A. 2,265

B. 1,550

C. 925

D. 385

E. 95

Answer: A (27,178 ÷ 12).

That’s on top of the 758 wild horses currently allowed by plan.

RELATED: BLM Invites Comments on Twin Peaks Gather Plan.