Beatys Butte Roundup Starts This Week?

The start date was supposed to be August 1, according to the latest schedule, but a report by the Lake County Examiner says it starts tomorrow.

The goal is 100 horses gathered with 50 removed.  The current population is 261.

The story did not indicate if an excess of studs would be returned to the HMA to skew the sex ratio or if the mares would be treated with contraceptives.

The operation will be carried out with bait and water traps and will not be open to public observation.

The HMA covers about 434,000 acres in southern Oregon and has an AML of 250.

Beatys Butte HMA Map 07-06-21

The HMA lies within the Beaty Butte allotment and is managed primarily for livestock.

Captured animals will be taken to the off-range corrals in Hines.

Gather stats and daily reports will be posted to this page.

As of today, an announcement has not appeared on the BLM news site.

RELATED: Beatys Butte Wild Horses Get Short End of Stick.

Filling in the Gaps at Healthy Horse HMA

The fictitious HMA was the subject of a presentation last week about gather planning and scheduling in wild horse areas, according to the WHBAB agenda.

Characteristics from page 6 of the slide deck:

  • AML – 500
  • Size – 750,000 acres
  • Livestock grazing – Limited
  • Other issues – Frequent droughts and invasive weeds

The horses allowed by plan require 6,000 AUMs per year and the aimed-at stocking rate is approximately 0.7 horses per thousand acres.

The presentation did not provide any information about resources assigned to livestock and did not include an EA for enforcement actions associated therewith, so the meaning of ‘limited’ is not clear.

Western Horse Watchers has yet to see an HMA where, say, twenty to thirty percent of the authorized forage has been allocated to privately owned cattle and sheep, neglecting those areas where permitted grazing is not allowed.

We need a bridge that will take us from the horse side of the management plan to the ranching side and the chart in this post about stocking rates will do exactly that.

Start on the x-axis at 0.7, move vertically until reaching the dashed line, then go horizontally to the left until you hit the y-axis.  An estimated 85% of the forage has been assigned to other users of public lands (with a small amount reserved for wildlife, not considered in this post).

So, indeed, grazing is limited.  Healthy Horse HMA is managed primarily for livestock, not principally.  Areas no longer designated for wild horses, around half of the land identified in 1971, might be managed almost exclusively for livestock.

The total authorized forage is 6,000 ÷ .15 = 40,000 AUMs per year, with 34,000 AUMs per year dedicated to livestock.

The advocates, not mentioned in the presentation, are undeterred by these figures and continue to push their darting programs.  The voices of one or more celebrities may have been added to bolster the effort.

Occasionally, water may be scarce for the horses, but the ranchers have installed various improvements that insulate their herds from droughts, perhaps with the assistance of the federal government.  Every year, 50% of the grazing fees, or $10 million, whichever is greater, is plowed back into the program.

In recent years, the $10 million limit has prevailed, because the grazing fees, stuck in a time capsule since the 1960s, are artificially low.

The forage assigned to livestock would support an additional 2,833 wild horses, for a True AML of 3,333.

The stocking rate at the new AML would be approximately 4.4 horses per thousand acres, or if you prefer, about 227 acres per animal.

A larger horse population might do a better job of knocking down those invasive weeds.

The 2,833 horses displaced from the HMA by privately owned livestock represent 5.8% of the 48,897 horses currently in off-range holding, according to figures provided at the meeting.

Conversely, up to 5.8% of the horses in off-range holding could be returned to the range by ending public-lands ranching at Healthy Horse HMA, a savings of two to five million dollars per year.

The decrease in receipts from lost grazing fees would be $45,900 per year.

Most people would eagerly give up that income if they could save that much money.

The presentation said that a survey found 1,200 wild horses in the area, considerably less than 3,333, so there is no need for a roundup.  The problem is livestock, not horses.

RELATED: WHBAB Offers New Slate of Anti-Horse Recommendations.

Wildcatters Heading to Diamond Hills North HMA?

Public scoping has begun for a proposed drilling rig and supporting equipment in the Diamond Valley, south of Elko, NV.  Comments can be submitted by email until July 30.

The coordinates given in the news release put the project on the western side of the HMA or slightly beyond, so there are probably some wild horses in the area—those that escaped last year’s roundup or have migrated in to fill the vacuum.

Diamond 1-27 Well Map 07-04-21

As of today, the project documents include a topographic map but that’s it.  The amount of land needed for the project is probably just a few acres, enough to displace 1/200th of a horse at typical stocking rates.

The number of horses displaced from public lands by permitted grazing and those lost to fertility controls are far greater.

Undeniable Truth #3.

RELATED: Diamond Wild Horses Get Short End of Stick.

UPDATE: The BLM rep listed in the news release said on July 6 that the project requires five acres, which would displace 1/200th of a horse as noted above.

Katie Heigl Duped by Advocates?

Refer to this news release, appearing today on EIN Presswire.

Although it addresses the misguided practice of PZP darting, it does not reflect the writer’s desire to see America’s wild horses moved to remote wilderness areas not particularly suited to livestock grazing, so the ranchers can have all of their food.

Eighty to ninety five percent is not enough.

RELATED: Onaqui Wild Horse Rally Today at Utah State Capital.

Onaqui Wild Horse Rally Today at Utah State Capital

Refer to this story by Deseret News.  A keyword search yielded these results:

  • Cattle – 0 occurrences
  • Sheep – 0
  • Ranching – 0
  • Allotment – 0
  • Grazing – 0
  • Management priorities – 0
  • Resource allocations – 0
  • Land-use plans – 0
  • Humane – 2
  • Birth control – 2
  • Fertility control – 1

None of the horses could be reached for comment.

RELATED: Onaqui Rally at State Capital.

Failure to Connect the Dots #2

Consider the reasoning in this letter to The Salt Lake Tribune about the Onaqui roundup.  The axiomatic basis (Assertion 0) was provided by Western Horse Watchers.

0. The land was set aside for wild horses.

1. Band stallions defend their families and do other horsey stuff.

2. Cattle and sheep vastly outnumber the horses.

3. Therefore, we should drive birth rates to zero, destroy their families and let the bands die off, sometimes referred to as ‘humane management.’

Western Horse Watchers was unable to determine if the letter was written by an advocate or a rancher.

RELATED: Onaqui Roundup Announced, Failure to Connect the Dots.

WHBAB Offers New Slate of Anti-Horse Recommendations

The Board met online June 30 and July 1.  Western Horse Watchers did not view any of the proceedings, including public comments.

The first recommendation, in view of the “unprecedented drought situation,” is to create “an emergency action plan including the capacity to gather and house an unprecedented number of equids, coincidentally contacting FEMA and Interior regarding possible funding, and issuing an emergency declaration.”

Getting rid of wild horses and burros has been the goal all along but the idea is easier to sell when you can point to a temporary change in their environment.

Never let a crisis go to waste.

RELATED: WHBAB Meets Next Month.

Pancake Gather Plan

Onaqui Roundup Announced

The incident, which begins on July 11, is necessary because the land can’t support the current number of horses in conjunction with other animals and resource uses.

Dry conditions have aggravated the situation, according to the news release.

The method of capture was not specified but the operation will be open to public observation after the first day.

The HMA covers about 205,000 acres and has an AML of 210, for an aimed-at stocking rate of one wild horse per thousand acres.

Onaqui HMA Map 07-01-21

The gather target is 400, with 296 horses to be removed, according to the roundup schedule dated June 15.

Captured animals will be sent to the Sutherland and Delta off-range corrals.

Mares returned to the range will be treated with contraceptives.

The number of livestock affected by the mandatory AUM curtailments is not known.

A link for the gather stats and daily reports was not provided.

Over 200 wild horses were removed from the area two years ago.

RELATED: Rallying for Onaqui Wild Horses or Privately Owned Livestock?