The start dates for the Salt Wells Creek and Adobe Town roundups were delayed in the July 1 schedule as parties trying to stop them await a decision from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals according to an article by WyoFile.
Wild horse removal begins tomorrow in the retained portion of Adobe Town (outside the checkerboard), while operations in Salt Wells Creek and the zeroed-out portion of Adobe Town (inside the checkerboard) are set for August 25.
Demonstrations organized by the Wyoming Wildlife Protection Group occurred at the BLM Field Office and near the Chamber of Commerce on July 10 according to a story by the Rocket Miner.
A small group gathered yesterday demanding answers from the Forest Service, including photos from the holding facility, according to a report by KTNV News.
The band was taken to an undisclosed location in Utah.
The agency may have handed them off to the BLM, which has three off-range corrals in the state: Axtell, Delta and Sutherland.
Unlike the Campaign Against America’s Wild Horses and its army of nitwits, the protesters did not try to sell mass sterilization, the inevitable result of “humane population reduction,” as wild horse conservation.
Snippet from statute: It is the policy of Congress that wild free-roaming horses and burros shall be protected from capture, branding, harassment, or death
Snippet from manual: To protect wild horses and burros from unauthorized capture, branding, harassment or death
The figures above are based on the daily reports.
The capture total includes 11 stallions, 10 mares and 3 foals.
Youngsters represented 12.5% of the animals gathered.
Of the adults, 52.4% were male and 47.6% were female.
The gather page does not indicate if BLM staff are using the permanent trap site.
Up to 15 mares will be treated with PZP and returned to the range according to the July 1 schedule.
The HMA is subject to permitted grazing. Resources liberated to date:
The co-chair of the House Pesticide Caucus has reintroduced a bill that would stop the roundups but not the removals according to a report by KLAS News.
Predictably, the Campaign Against America’s Wild Horses, a leader in mass sterilization and fierce opponent of principal use, endorsed it.
Originally known as the Save a Horse, Hire a Cowboy Act, the bill supports three tenets of rangeland management, forcing a change in methods but not the goals.
It will likely go nowhere in a Republican-controlled Congress.
Wild Horse Basin Ranch covers 92,351 acres according to the agent’s listing.
The ranch boundary coincides roughly with that of the FL Ranch Allotment.
The allotment master report puts it in the Improve category, with 5,548 active AUMs on 35,098 public acres, equivalent to 13.2 wild horses per thousand public acres.
Your faithful public servants claim that public lands in the western U.S. can only support one wild horse per thousand acres (25,500 animals on 25.6 million acres).
The ArcGIS Viewer shows state and private lands within the allotment but the acreage is not given in the report.
The listing does not give the deeded acreage but the difference between the total acreage and leased acreage is 31,892.
Thus, the ranch meets three out of four requirements for a wild horse refuge.
The agent’s video says the ranch can support 1,000 head year around, so that would be an estimate of the carrying capacity if it was repurposed as a refuge.
Wild horses can be placed on public lands not identified for their use by acquiring or controlling base properties tied to one or more grazing allotments and flipping the preference to horses.
There is no assurance that the stakeholders would agree to such a change and opposition at the state and local levels may be intense.
Snippet from statute: It is the policy of Congress that wild free-roaming horses and burros shall be protected from capture, branding, harassment, or death
Snippet from manual: To protect wild horses and burros from unauthorized capture, branding, harassment or death
The figures above are based on the daily reports.
Results for Days 20 to 28 were posted today.
An abandoned foal was euthanized on Day 25, lifting the death rate to 0.3%.
The capture total includes 311 jacks, 279 jennies and 53 foals.
Youngsters represented 8.2% of the animals gathered.
Of the adults, 52.7% were male and 47.3% were female.
The location of the trap site is not known.
The name of the contractor was not provided.
Eighteen jennies were treated with PZP on Day 19, bringing the total to 78.
The July 1 schedule indicates the pesticide of choice was GonaCon Equine.
The Complex is subject to permitted grazing. Resources liberated to date:
Wild horses can be placed on public lands not identified for their use by acquiring base properties tied to one or more grazing allotments and flipping the preference to horses.