Livestock receive 85% of the authorized forage, excluding wildlife, but who’s counting!
RELATED: HMAPs Are Not the Answer.
Western Horse Watchers Association
Exposing the Hypocrisy, Lies and Incompetence of the Wild Horse Advocates
Livestock receive 85% of the authorized forage, excluding wildlife, but who’s counting!
RELATED: HMAPs Are Not the Answer.
Livestock receive four times more forage than the horses but who’s counting?
RELATED: HMAPs Are Not the Answer.
The statute, altered at the behest of ranching interests, protects wild horses and burros to some degree, but not their land. It does not protect them from the advocates.
Roughly half of the land, if you include the proposed Rock Springs RMP Amendments, has been taken away and is now devoted almost exclusively to permitted grazing.
Areas with non-zero AMLs are managed primarily for livestock.
The resource management plans assign anywhere from 80% to 95% of the authorized forage to privately owned cattle and sheep.
The pest control programs follow naturally: Roundups, sterilizations, fertility control programs, sex ratio adjustments, adoption and training programs, off-range holding and sanctuaries.
Animals in off-range corrals (feedlots) are protected.
Animals in long-term holding are protected. Most won’t be adopted. They are sent there to die.
Animals in the adoption pipeline are protected, in theory, until they are titled.
If you only care about protection, you’re in good shape.
If you want to see them wild and free on their home range, and this does not include gradual extermination by the Montana Solution, as the advocates prefer, you have to focus on the RMPs and the bureaucrats who write them.
They never have to face you, the taxpayers and voters.
RELATED: Group Calls for End of Pancake Roundup, Demands Investigation.

The incident began on January 11. Gather stats through January 20:
One horse was euthanized on Day 8. The death rate is 1.2%.
The cumulative total includes 357 stallions, 383 mares and 112 foals.
Youngsters represented 13.1% of the horses captured, consistent with a herd growth rate of 8% per year, assuming a 5% death rate.
Of the adults, 48.2% were stallions and 51.8% were mares.
Body condition scores were not reported.
The location of the trap site within the Complex was not provided.

Day 10 ended with 41 unaccounted-for animals.
The number of horses removed to date is 848. Mares returned to the Complex will be treated with population suppression of unspecified type.
Other statistics:
RELATED: Pancake Roundup Day 7.
The loss of a colt on Day 1 of the roundup sparked outrage among some advocates, according to a news release on EIN, but nobody’s asking why it’s occurring.
What about the foal that was put down on Day 4 of the Jackson Mountains roundup because it was an orphan? Where’s the indignation?
Regarding HMAPs, if the resource management plan assigns 85% of the authorized forage to privately owned livestock, do you think you can write a new plan that assigns 98% of the resource to the horses with 2% to wildlife and make it stick?
Maybe they’re OK with the current allocations and just want to make sure the horses don’t suffer as they are enforced.
At least they didn’t use the death to justify a darting program for the Complex.
An announcement appeared yesterday on the BLM news site but now it’s gone.
The project can be accessed at ePlanning, which includes the news release.
The Proposed Action, discussed on page 9 of the EA (page 10 in the pdf), features helicopter roundups, sterilization of up to 95% of captured stallions and returning them to the Complex, IUDs for mares returned to the Complex, treatment of captured mares with GonaCon Equine including those receiving IUDs and skewing the sex ratios to 60% males and 40% females.
Four HMAs would be targeted over a ten-year period: Conant Creek, Rock Creek, Dishpan Butte and Muskrat Basin. Data for the HMAs are presented in Figure 1.
The Western Watersheds map shows the project area. All four HMAs are subject to permitted grazing. Refer to data in Table 2 of the EA.
The news release described the combined AML as “the point at which the wild horse population is consistent with the land’s capacity to support it and other mandated uses of those lands,” code words for privately owned livestock, so the unstated purpose of the project is resource enforcement—get rid of the horses so the ranchers can access all of the AUMs on their permits.
Comments can be submitted online and will be accepted until February 18.
Changes to forage allocations in the Complex cannot be accomplished through a pest control program. Don’t ask a highway patrol officer to change the speed limit.
The management plan must be amended, which is outside the scope of the project.
RELATED: Scoping for North Lander Gather Plan Begins.
UPDATE: January 20 news release restored.
Commonly referred to as darting rifles, they allow the advocates, most of whom are women and most of whom are aborting/contracepting/sterilizing in their own lives, to project their moral depravity onto America’s wild horses.
RELATED: Putting the Montana Solution Into Practice: Projectors.

The roundup was an overwhelming success, according to a BLM spokesman interviewed for a story published today by Cowboy State Daily.
Predictably, Suzanne Roy of the Campaign Against America’s Wild Horses said it was a waste of taxpayer money and that the government should be getting rid of the horses with “humane, scientific management,” which she referred to a few weeks ago as the Montana Solution.
The death rate was 0.9%, not 0.009% as stated in the article.
RELATED: Rock Springs Roundup Over?
The Foundation for America’s Public Lands, a congressionally-chartered, non-profit institution authorized by Congress in 2017, launched yesterday, according to a BLM news release.
The Foundation will leverage public and private dollars to conserve, protect and restore lands managed by the federal agency.
How long before it’s co-opted by ranching interests?
Maybe that’s already baked into the charter.
There are too many of them and they’re robbing the poor ranchers of their birthright.
The SCC School of PZP Darting has all the answers and every mare has a target on her.
That’s how the advocates protect wild horses.

The gather page says operations concluded on January 17, with 4,161 horses captured, 580 returned and 37 dead. No activity has been reported since.
An announcement has not appeared at the BLM news site.
The number of animals shipped was not provided. The total, based on the daily reports, was 3,605.
The number of animals returned cannot be correlated with figures in the daily reports.
The results don’t balance:
4,161 – 580 – 37 – 3,605 = –61
More horses were processed than captured.
The number of horses removed was
4,161 – 580 = 3,581
The capture goal was 4,400 and the removal goal was 3,500.
The pre-gather population was thought to be 5,105, compared to a combined AML of 2,145 for the five HMAs involved—which are managed primarily for livestock.

The advocates wanted the government to cancel the roundup and get rid of the horses with PZP, oblivious to the lopsided resource allocations that put ranching interests far above those of the horses.
The incident was a likely precursor to the Rock Springs RMP Amendments, which will close three of the HMAs and downsize a fourth.
Little Colorado, the fifth HMA subject to the roundup, was not included in the proposed amendments, as it has already been, in effect, zeroed out.
RELATED: Rock Springs Roundup Starts in Two Weeks.
The incident began on January 16. Gather stats through January 18:
A mare was euthanized on Day 3. The death rate is 1.1%.
The cumulative total includes 42 stallions, 38 mares and 13 foals.
Youngsters represented 14.0% of the horses captured, consistent with a herd growth rate of 9% per year, assuming a 5% death rate.
Of the adults, 52.5% were stallions and 47.5% were mares.
Body condition scores were not reported.
The location of the trap site within the HMA was not provided.
Day 3 ended with 83 unaccounted-for animals.
The nine privately owned horses returned to their owner on Day 3 were placed into the Shipped category.
Other statistics:
RELATED: Desatoya Roundup in Progress.
The Pequop Conservancy sold the property, which straddles I-80 about 60 miles east of Elko, NV, to Ruby IVFR Holdings in the fall of 2021, according to a report posted yesterday by the Elko Daily Free Press.
The deeded acres may consist of checkerboard lands in the highway corridor, similar to the Rock Springs HMAs in Wyoming. Refer to the image at 1:30 in the following video.
The ranch is north of the Spruce-Pequop HMA, site of the wild horse shootings in 2018 and part of Madeleine Pickens’ Mustang Monument. Click on map to open in new tab.
The story did not indicate if free-roaming horses are found in and around the ranch.
The privately held acres may qualify as a base property that secures grazing preference to the West Big Springs Allotment. The permittee is 333 Ranch, which may be a third-party producer of hay and range-fed beef.
Although much of this post is speculation, the price tag tells you that the entrance fee to the world of public-lands ranching is not cheap.
NOTE: The markings on the door and tailgate of the truck at 3:19 indicate 333 Ranch.
SORRY, THE PERVERTS AT GOOGLE SENT YOU TO THE WRONG PLACE.
The incident began on January 11. Gather stats through January 17:
No animals were captured on Day 5.
The death rate is 1.3%.
The cumulative total includes 296 stallions, 320 mares and 97 foals.
Youngsters represented 13.6% of the horses captured, consistent with a herd growth rate of 8% per year, assuming a 5% death rate.
Of the adults, 48.1% were stallions and 51.9% were mares.
Body condition scores were not reported.
The location of the trap site within the Complex was not provided.

Day 7 ended with 112 unaccounted-for animals.
The number of horses removed to date is 709. Mares returned to the Complex will be treated with population suppression of unspecified type.
Other statistics:
RELATED: Pancake Roundup Day 4.
This group applies the Montana Solution to the McCullough Peaks herd.
They may not be able to convert an AML to AUMs or tell you the percentage of forage assigned to livestock in the HMA, but they know exactly how much adjuvant to add to the PZP and how long to mix them.

They say they’re protecting the horses but they’re actually protecting the public-lands ranchers.
Maybe they are public-lands ranchers.
RELATED: Ranchers and Advocates Snub McCullough Peaks Wild Horses.
Twenty trainers will have 120 days to gentle an unbroken and untouched horse for a competition on August 27, according to a story posted today by the Steamboat Pilot of Steamboat Springs, CO.
They are usually buried six to eight feet deep and unless you were there during construction, the only indication you have of their existence is the occasional surface marker or casing vents at road crossings. A clear-cut strip through a wooded area may be another indication.
The two markers on the right in this image are casing vents. Third from right is a marker for aerial patrols. The other four provide a general location of the pipeline and usually include warnings to “Call before you dig.”

The advocates are always looking for new ways to divert your attention from the two greatest threats to our wild horses: Themselves and the public-lands ranchers.
RELATED: Advocate Blames Roundups on Pipelines, Mines!

Their home page suggests that they exist mostly to get rid of wild horses, although their workload was lightened by last year’s roundup. Note the Gen 1 gauged projectors.
They must have carte blanche from the BLM, as they are providing a valuable service for the public-lands ranchers.
All they ask in return is a small donation to help them continue their important work.
RELATED: TOLDYA: Advocates Consigned to Mopping-Up Role.
