The incident began on September 18. Results through September 24:
- Scope: High Rock, Fox Hog, Wall Canyon HMAs
- Purpose: Pest control, resource enforcement, rancher protection
- Target: Horses
- Type: Planned
- Method: Helicopter
- Category: Cruel and costly*
- Better way: Poison mares with ovary-killing pesticides*
- Captured: 325, up from 197 on Day 5 (does not include 15 burros taken on Day 6)
- Average daily take: 46.4
- Capture goal: 494
- Removal goal: 404
- Returned: None
- Deaths: 13, up from 7 on Day 5
- Shipped: 96, no change from Day 5
The figures above are based on the daily reports, not the totals posted by the BLM.
Data quality has gone south. The sidebar at the gather page says 181 horses shipped.
Trapping occurred at High Rock and Fox Hog on Days 6 and 7.
Fifteen burros were picked up on Day 6.
Four horses were put down on Day 6 for physical defects, followed by two more on Day 7.
The death rate is 4.0%.
The capture total includes 133 stallions, 155 mares and 37 foals.
Youngsters represented 11.4% of the animals gathered, consistent with a growth rate of 6% per year.
Of the adults, 46.2% were male and 53.8% were female.
Body condition scores ranged from 4 to 5.
The HMAs and surrounding lands are subject to permitted grazing.
*According to advocates.

Day 7 ended with 216 unaccounted-for animals, a figure inflated by the discrepancy in animals shipped.
Mares returned to the Complex will be treated with GonaCon Equine, a fertility control pesticide.
Other statistics:
- Forage liberated to date: 3,900 AUMs per year
- Water liberated to date: 3,250 gallons per day
- Forage assigned to livestock: Undetermined
- Horses displaced from area by permitted grazing: Undetermined
- True AML: Undetermined
- Stocking rate at new AML: Undetermined
- Horses removed because of drilling and mining: Ask the advocates
Overpopulation means more horses than allowed by plan, not necessarily more horses than the land can support.
There’s plenty of food and water in the Complex but the bureaucrats have dedicated most of the resources to animal agriculture.
RELATED: Surprise Roundup, Day 5.