Red Desert Roundup Day 28

The event started October 10.  Gather stats through November 6:

  • Horses captured: 1,925
  • Goal: 2,400
  • Deaths: 10
  • Returned: 150
  • Shipped: 1,337

No gather activity on Day 28.

One death occurred on Day 27, related to the roundup.

Foals accounted for 22.2% of the horses gathered since October 10.  Of the captured adults, approximately 46% are males and 54% are females.  Body condition scores are not known.

No horses were returned to their home range since the last update.

The number of unaccounted-for horses is 428.

Five HMAs are involved in the roundup.

RELATED: Red Desert Roundup Day 25.

Paisley Desert Neighbors

The stocking rate allowed by plan in the Paisley Desert HMA is 0.5 horses per thousand acres.  Given a forage requirement 12 AUMs per year per horse, land designated for them must be able to produce 6 AUMs per year per thousand acres (AUMTA).

The HMA is also designated for permitted livestock grazing.  Allotment numbers are shown in the following map.  The HMA boundary appears in red.

Paisley Desert Allotments

Appendix E1, of the 2018 Lakeview RMP Amendment, provides data for the allotments.

At Squaw Lake, #0418, 834 AUMs per year have been assigned to livestock on 41,354 acres, for a production rate of 20 AUMTA.

Saint Patricks, #0419, offers 750 AUMs per year on 25,674 acres, for a production rate of 29 AUMTA.

Sheeprock, #0428, provides 3,967 AUMs per year on 146,278 acres, for a production rate of 27 AUMTA.

These parcels can only produce 6 AUMTA if you’re talking about wild horses.

What about the neighboring pastures?

Allotment #0426, on the southwest side of the HMA, offers 1,021 AUMs per year on 47,850 acres, for a production rate of 21 AUMTA.

Allotment #0420, on the northwest side of the HMA, provides 1,056 AUMs per year on 21,882 acres, for a production rate of 48 AUMTA.

Allotment #0430, on the east side of the HMA, has 4,202 AUMs per year on 43,654 acres, for a production rate of 96 AUMTA.

What can you conclude about these numbers?  Land is much more productive when it’s designated for livestock.  Productivity drops sharply when it’s earmarked for horses.

That’s why AMLs are small and true AMLs are much larger.

RELATED: Paisley Desert Horses Get Short End of Stick.

Red Desert Roundup Day 25

The event started October 10.  Gather stats through November 3:

  • Horses captured: 1,851
  • Goal: 2,400
  • Deaths: 9
  • Returned: 150
  • Shipped: 1,246

No gather activity on Day 23.

Two deaths occurred on Day 23 and three on Day 25, all due to pre-existing conditions.

Foals accounted for 22.2% of the horses gathered since October 10.  Of the captured adults, approximately 46% were males and 54% were females.  Body condition scores are not known.

Thirty two horses were returned to their home range since the last update.  The number treated with fertility control is now 75.

The number of unaccounted-for horses is 446.  The contractor may be holding them on site.

The release of captured horses may indicate the operation has concluded in one area and has resumed in another.

The reports don’t say where the helicopters are flying.  Five HMAs are involved in the roundup.

RELATED: Red Desert Roundup Day 22.

Piceance Roundup Pending

BLM announced today the signing of a categorical exclusion and decision record authorizing the removal of approximately 75 wild horses from private lands in the Piceance-East Douglas HMA, subject to a 30-day appeal period.

The documents were approved last week but the news release appeared today.  It’s not an announcement of a roundup but the intent to round up wild horses.

The operation would be carried out in a grazing allotment at the north end of the HMA and probably wouldn’t be open to public observation due to the method of capture.

The HMA covers 190,130 acres in western Colorado and has an AML of 235, for an aimed-at stocking rate of 1.2 horses per thousand acres.

Piceance HMA Map

The number of allotments intersecting the HMA and the amount of forage allocated to livestock are not known.

The current wild horse population in and around the HMA is approximately 1,200.

Paisley Desert Horses Get Short End of Stick

The Paisley Desert HMA covers 297,802 acres in central Oregon and has an AML of 150, according to a 2009 Environmental Assessment for wild horse management actions over a ten year period.

Western Horse Watchers was unable to find a current assessment and record of decision in the NEPA register, which may explain why the roundup last month was carried out on an emergency basis.  The appendices and maps were not provided with the old EA and ROD.

The horses allowed by plan require 1,800 AUMs per.  The stocking rate allowed by plan is 0.5 horses per thousand acres.

The HMA intersects four allotments.  The map packet in the 2003 Lakeview RMP shows them, along with many others, but does not show the HMA boundary.  A rough outline has been added by Western Horse Watchers, suggesting that all of the land inside the HMA is subject to permitted livestock grazing.

Paisley Desert Allotment Map

Table 1 in the EA provides grazing seasons and forage allocations inside the HMA.

The management plan assigns 10,151 AUMs per year to livestock, 1,800 AUMs per year to horses and 624 AUMs per year to wildlife.

Paisley Desert Grazing Data A-1

The Christmas Lake grazing season is 9.5 months per year.  The CL permittee would have to place 484 cow/calf pairs inside the HMA to graze off 4,598 AUMs in that time frame.  The estimated herd sizes for the other three allotments are 882, 300 and 238 cow/calf pairs, respectively, for a total of 1,904 cow/calf pairs inside the HMA.

The estimated stocking rate is 1,904 ÷ 297,802 × 1,000 = 6.4 cow/calf pairs per thousand acres and the weighted average grazing season is 5.3 months per year.

These figures are compared in the following charts.

Paisley Desert Charts-1The HMA is managed primarily for livestock.  Wild horses receive just 15% of the total authorized forage, excluding wildlife, providing more evidence that fractional stocking rates correlate with large amounts of forage diverted to privately owned livestock.

The forage assigned to livestock would support an additional 846 horses, for a true AML of 996.

The 350 horses remaining after the roundup put the HMA at 0.4X AML, not 2.3X AML.

The pre-gather population of 1,050 contained 54 excess horses, not 900.

If livestock aren’t free to move from one allotment to another, how are the horses supposed to do that?  The map above only shows the allotment boundaries, it does not show the pastures within the allotments.  The place must be crawling with fences.

RELATED: Paisley Desert Preview.

Paisley Desert Preview

Here are the forage allocations for the Paisley Desert HMA, as presented in Table 1 of the Final EA for wild horse management actions therein.

Paisley Desert Grazing Data A-1

The HMA intersects four allotments and has a Herd Area Management Plan (HMAP).

Would you say it’s managed principally for wild horses?

The Saint Patricks allotment is 100% inside the HMA but livestock receive over 20 times more forage than horses on that parcel.

The EA said on page 27 that solar-powered wells were proposed for the HMA to provide water for the horses but over 700 of them were removed last month due to lack of water.

Red Desert Roundup Day 22

The event started October 10.  Gather stats through October 31:

  • Horses captured: 1,672
  • Goal: 2,400
  • Deaths: 4
  • Returned: 118
  • Shipped: 1,055

No deaths were reported over the last three days.

Foals accounted for 22.4% of the horses gathered since October 10.  Of the captured adults, approximately 46% were males and 54% were females.  Body condition scores are not known.

Three more horses were returned to their home since the last update.  The number treated with fertility control is now 59.

The number of unaccounted-for horses is 1,672 – 4 – 118 – 1,055 = 495.  The contractor may be holding them on site.

The reports don’t say where the horses were captured or returned.  Five HMAs are involved in the roundup.

RELATED: Red Desert Roundup Day 19, Roundup Checks and Balances.