It’s a nonreproducing herd, and the males are actually geldings, but an article by the Craig Press refers to them as stallions.
“While the stallions are the big flashy ones that do all the big bites and everything, it’s those older mares that are really the bosses, and nobody crosses the boss mare.”
That might be true at the refuge but it’s not true in the wild, despite all the fairy tales you’ve heard from the advocates.
Problem is, it’s getting harder and harder to find herds that are truly wild.
Many in the public eye, especially those chronicled on socialist media, have been decimated by the government or ruined by the advocates.
To its credit, the refuge is based on the right concept—purchasing a base property and flipping the preference to horses—but the numbers fall short of the ideals.
RELATED: How Does Wild Horse Refuge Rate as a Wild Horse Refuge?
