Clan Alpine Roundup Announced

The incident will begin on or about November 7 according to the BLM news release.

A helicopter will push the horses into the trap and operations will be open to public observation, probably from a distance.

The capture and removal goals are 1,594 and 1,381, respectively.

Up to 81 mares will be treated with GonaCon Equine, a fertility control pesticide, before being returned the range with up to 121 stallions.

The target zone is approximately 60 miles east of Fallon, NV in Churchill County.

The 979 horses allowed by plan require 11,748 AUMs per year.

The stocking rate allowed by plan is 3.3 wild horses per thousand acres, three times higher than the target rate across all HMAs of one wild horse per thousand acres.

The current population is thought to be 1,661 plus this year’s foals.

Captured animals will be taken to the off-range corrals at Palomino Valley.

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

The HMA and surrounding lands are subject to permitted grazing.

It is the same size as the HA and the management plan assigns more forage to horses than livestock.  Click on map to open in new tab.

RELATED: BLM Publishes Clan Alpine Final Planning Documents.

Clan Alpine HMA with Allotments 06-17-23

Foal-Free Friday, Channeling Alternative C Edition

The Park Service has proposed the removal of wild horses from Theodore Roosevelt National Park under two scenarios, Alternatives B and C.

In option B, horses would be forcibly removed to quickly reduce the herd size to zero.

Alternative C corresponds to a fully contracepted herd that dies off after some of the horses are removed.

The Park Service designated option C as the Proposed Action (preferred option).

The plan faces stiff opposition, especially from the advocates.

At the Salt River, Virginia Range and McCullough Peaks, you have fully contracepted herds, or nearly so, that are dying off, but the advocates offer no opposition.

They think it’s great!

So who’s fooling whom?

What they really want is a contract with the Park Service to carry out Alternative C.

The pesticide of choice would likely be Zonastat-H.

RELATED: Foal Free-Friday, Questioning the Assumptions Edition.

Pesticide Patrol 08-16-23

Roberts Mountain Roundup, Day 11

The incident began on October 22.  Results through November 1:

  • Scope: Roberts Mountain, Whistler Mountain, Fish Creek HMAs
  • Purpose: Pest control, resource enforcement, rancher protection
  • Target: Horses
  • Type: Planned
  • Method: Helicopter
  • Category: Cruel and costly*
  • Better way: Sterilize mares with pesticide-laced darts*
  • Captured: 761, up from 589 on Day 9
  • Average daily take: 69.2
  • Capture goal: 1,106
  • Removal goal: 1,068
  • Returned: None
  • Deaths: 4, no change from Day 9
  • Shipped: 551, up from 501 on Day 9

The location of the trap site was not given.

The death rate is 0.5%.  Horses lost in the Day 9 truck rollover were not included in the death count.

The capture total includes 295 stallions, 351 mares and 115 foals.

Youngsters represented 15.1% of the animals gathered, suggesting the herd is growing at a rate of 10% per year.

Of the adults, 45.7% were male and 54.3% were female.

Body condition scores ranged from 4 to 5 on Days 10 and 11.

The HMAs and surrounding lands are subject to permitted grazing.

*According to advocates.

Roberts Mountain Complex with Allotments 10-16-23

Day 11 ended with 206 unaccounted-for animals.

Up to 19 mares will be treated with GonaCon Equine, a fertility control pesticide, before being returned to the range with up to 19 stallions.

Other statistics:

  • Forage liberated to date: 9,132 AUMs per year
  • Water liberated to date: 7,610 gallons per day
  • Forage assigned to livestock: Undetermined
  • Horses displaced from Complex 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.

RELATED: Roberts Mountain Roundup, Day 9.

Assateague Pony Census, October 2023

The herd on the Maryland side of the island consisted of 15 bands and 81 horses according to the October 27 inventory.

Last update was in July.

Seven foals were born this year, seven years after the darting program was shut off.

The pesticide of choice was Zonastat-H, a favorite of the advocates.

Not included in the report:

  • Ratio of females to males
  • Size of breeding population
  • Number of sterilized mares

The BLM WHB Handbook indicates the breeding population should exceed 50 animals to maintain an acceptable level of genetic diversity.

The Assateague Island Alliance updates the lists.

RELATED: Assateague Pony Census, July 2023.

BLM Announces New Funding Opportunity for WHB Research

Proposals should align with the 2021 Strategic Plan and funding is subject to Congressional direction and appropriations. according to yesterday’s news release.

Priorities include new or improved fertility control methods for wild horses, examining the relationships between wild horses or burros and their environment, and improving a variety of wild horse and burro program activities, such as aerial surveys, genetic monitoring, animal handling, adoption rates and the human dimensions of wild horse and burro management.

An interesting topic in the area of human dimensions would be the role of moral depravity in wild horse and burro management.

For example, how do promiscuity, adultery, contraception, abortion, sterilization, divorce and sexual perversion (LGBT) influence policy and practice?

How many of the advocates subscribe to these values?

As for the role of man-made climate change, there is none.

Absence of predators?  Totally man made, to protect the most noble and deserving nonnative species on America’s public lands.

RELATED: Decision Published for Fertility Control Research.

Pancake Gather Plan

Picacho Roundup Over

The incident concluded on September 30, with 101 burros captured, 101 shipped, none released and no deaths, according to figures in the sidebar.

The daily reports yield 100 captured and 119 shipped.

The capture total included 73 jacks, 21 jennies and 7 foals.

Youngsters represented 7% of the animals gathered.

Of the adults, 78% were male and 22% were female.

Two areas on the California side of the Colorado River were targeted.

RELATED: BLM Approves Another Nuisance Removal Near Cibola-Trigo HMA.

Pichaco Burro Removal 08-22-23

CAAWH Admits Virginia Range Mares Are Sterile?

A Virginia Range mare named Saddle Shoe is 11 years old and likely won’t have any more foals, according to a story dated October 31 by the Lassen County Times.

Why?

Because mares can’t conceive after age 10?  No.

Because stallions won’t breed older mares?  No.

Because advocates with the Campaign Against America’s Wild Horses ruined her with Zonastat-H?  Probably.

The writer points to the mare as a beneficiary of the darting program, now in its fifth year, not a victim.

And with five consecutive years of use, there are likely many more such mares.

The darting program proves there’s no need for mass roundups, crowded holding corrals and permanent sterilization—because the advocates are sterilizing them inconspicuously, much to the delight of the bureaucrats and ranchers.

Results of Darting Program 11-01-23

The article was likely drafted by CAAWH staff to draw attention to themselves and their wrongheaded ideas.

RELATED: Combatting Duplicity in the Wild Horse World.

Socialist Media Update for October 2023

Traffic from Facebook returned to the new normal last month after an unexpected jump in September.

The downward trend in 2023 may indicate that material by Western Horse Watchers has been banned or blocked by the advocates.

Hopefully their little Potemkin Villages are crumbling.

WordPress stopped reporting traffic from Twitter in August 2023.

RELATED: Socialist Media Update for September 2023.

Traffic from Socialist Media October 2023 11-01-23

Advocate Doubles Down on McCullough Remarks

The BLM should give the darting program a chance according to the writer of a letter to the Powell Tribune.

The herd is aging.  The death rate is increasing.  The ranchers need to be patient.

GonaCon will sterilize the mares.

If the agency removes the younger horses the herd will be in danger of dying out.

The capture goal will bring the herd well below the 150 adults needed to maintain genetic viability.

What a bunch of crap!

PZP sterilizes mares.

As birth rates go down, the herds die off.

Breeding populations are too small to sustain genetic diversity.

The minimum herd size of 150 to 200 wild horses (recommended in Section 4.4.6.3 of the WHB Handbook) assumes the advocates are not trying to beat the populations down with ovary-killing pesticides.

The Salt River and Virginia Range, known for their fanatical darting programs, have herds well above 150 but the advocates are driving the breeding populations to zero.

Pesticides R Us 09-26-23

They are responsible for as much or more long-term harm as the federal government.

RELATED: Advocates Say McCullough Peaks Roundup Not Necessary.