If Wild Horses Had Principal Use of West Cow Creek

The allotment, on the east side of Sand Springs HMA in Oregon, offers 9,594 active AUMs on 139,885 public acres, according to the Allotment Master Report.

The forage assigned to horses is zero.

How many wild horses could live there?

Using the principle of forage interchangeability, the True AML would be 9,594 ÷ 12 = 800, the number of horses the land could support if it was managed principally for them as specified in the original statute.

The stocking rate would be 800 ÷ 139,885 × 1,000 = 5.7 wild horses per thousand public acres.

Why is this important?

The bureaucrats and ranchers claim that public lands in the western U.S. can only support one wild horse per thousand acres (27,000 animals on 27 million acres).

The advocates reinforce the fairy tale with their darting programs.

If the allotment was an HMA, the AML would be 140, and 800 – 140 = 660 horses would be consigned to off-range holding because of permitted grazing.

BLM allotments in the state carry livestock equivalent to 87,934 wild horses on 13,130,302 public acres, or 6.7 wild horses per thousand public acres.

RELATED: The Allotments Tell the Story: They’re Lying, All of Them.

West Cow Creek Allotment 05-28-24

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