That’s according to Tracy “You need to manage the numbers to fit what’s available for the horses” Wilson of the Campaign Against America’s Wild Horses in a story dated May 6 by KTVN News about fences and water for the Virginia Range mustangs.
The video shows a foal tangled in the wires.
This is nonsense.
She oversees the PZP darting program that has put many of the mares at risk of sterility.
That’s how nonmotorized removal works: You snuff out new life and pray for the older horses to die, especially when you’re trying to convince the bureaucrats and ranchers that it’s a viable alternative to motorized removal.
RELATED: Virginia Range Darting Update for April 2024.

