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Posts Tagged ‘Roundups’

18 Captured Calico Stallions, Mare and Foal Start New Life, Thanks to Return to Freedom

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Reprinted With Permission From Wildhorsepreservation.org

http://www.wildhorsepreservation.org/news/?p=1883

Some of the only remaining intact stallions from the Bureau of Land Management’s Calico roundup, along with a Calico mustang mare and her foal, began a new life this week, thanks to Return to Freedom American Wild Horse Sanctuary

Shedding the BLM tags that identified them as livestock from around their necks, the Calico mustangs started their journey to a brighter future, one that respects them as individuals and honors the importance of their strong family bonds.

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Some of the only remaining intact stallions from the Bureau of Land Management’s Calico roundup, along with a Calico mustang mare and her foal, began a new life this week, thanks to Return to Freedom American Wild Horse Sanctuary

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The horses were transported safely from BLM holding pens near Reno to temporary quarters in Fallon, Nevada thanks to Willis Lamm and volunteers from the Wild Horse Preservation League, under the watchful eye of Deniz Bolbol, a volunteer who coordinated transport logistics for RTF.

At Fallon, they will await creation of a Return to Freedom/Soldier Meadows Ranch (SMR) wild horse preserve, on the lands adjacent to the homes that they, along with nearly 2,000 other wild horses, were captured from in January. RTF will undertake a groundbreaking effort to recreate for these mustangs the family bands that were shattered in the BLM helicopter stampede and capture operation.

The stallions are some of the few remaining intact studs from the roundup. Most were gelded in preparation for shipment to BLM long-term holding facilities in the Midwest.

Read more about the rescued mustangs here. Support this historic rescue effort by donating to Return to Freedom and earmarking it for the Calico Rescue Fund.

In April, Return to Freedom and Soldier Meadows Ranch submitted a proposal to the Interior Department and BLM for a pilot program to keep wild horses on the Calico range by converting SMR’s public livestock grazing allotments to wild horses. Four months later, RTF and SMR are still waiting for BLM to schedule a meeting to discuss the plan.

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Meanwhile, the stallions and the mare and her look-alike foal are adjusting well to their temporary quarters. Enjoy these photos, taken by Deniz Bolbol of the mustangs on their first days of their new journey. More to follow soon. . . .

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The Views and Opinions Expressed by the author are his or her opinions only and do not necessarily reflect those of this Web-Site or its agents, affiliates, officers, directors, staff, or contractors. The author at the time of this article did not own any shares or receive any consideration financial or otherwise from any company or person mentioned or referred to in the article.

 
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Reality of Round-Ups - The Pictures Tell All

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

WARNING: PICTURES BELOW ARE GRAPHIC

Reprinted With Permission From Wildhorsepreservation.org

http://www.wildhorsepreservation.org/roundups/reality.html

Injuries, abortions, trauma and death are the common results of wild horse round-ups (or “gathers,” to use a placating euphemism). Read Wild Horses the Stress of Captivity, a report by Dr. Bruce Nock. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) claims a mortality rate of 0.5% in connection with captures. The agency is able to claim such a low mortality rate because it attributes to natural causes most injuries/deaths sustained during round-ups (e.g., Paymaster, NV, 2006: although 21 horses were euthanized on site, BLM claimed a zero mortality rate for the round-up).

Few deaths are ever deemed by officials a “result” of the removal operations, and injury statistics are simply omitted. Reports of horses that later have to be euthanized due to injuries sustained during capture are common. According to a Capture Status Report obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request, 12% of the Golde Butte burros rounded up in March of 2007 were dead within six months of their capture. Just over two months after the Calico (Nevada) roundup ended in early 2010, 86of the 1,922 horses captured had died and an additional 40 heavily pregnant mares had spontaneously aborted. Read AWHPC’s report on the Calico wild horse deaths here.

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Horses seen galloping during a round-up are terrified wild animals chased by helicopter and running for their lives (e.g., NV, 1998: nine young mares died, after a 1,000-mile truck ride to Colorado, of “capture myopathy,” a condition in wild animals triggered by anxiety of capture). It has been documented that, long after they have been adopted out, BLM-captured horses will still react in terror to a helicopter flying overhead. We are aware of at least one young girl killed when the mustang she was riding panicked as a result of such an incident.

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As wild horses are driven into holding pens, closely-knit family bands are broken up; foals may be separated from their mothers, trampled, or sometimes, too exhausted to keep up with the herd, left behind to fend for themselves out on the range; stallions, suddenly crammed in close quarters, will fight. At the holding site, BLM makes “liberal” use of its euthanasia policy: horses with physical defects such as club-feet are euthanized, including adults that had managed to thrive for years in the wild (e.g., White Mountain, NV, 2007: eight club-footed horses between the ages of 2 and 10 euthanized).

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BLM routinely turns a blind eye on abuse by its two main round-up contractors. To quote an eye-witness to the 2006 Sulphur round-up in Utah: “In all my life I have never seen such blatant abuse and neglect and just plain lack of compassion for horses, or animals in general for that matter.” It is not uncommon for contractors to drag a listless body into the round-up pen to collect their fee, as they get paid per horse, dead or alive. In 1992, BLM’s primary round-up contractor was indicted on federal charges of selling 77 wild horses to a Texas slaughterhouse after illegally rounding up the horses via helicopter.

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Round-ups are often conducted in secrecy, with heavy police presence to keep the public at bay. Once in a while, BLM and its contractors will invite the public and the media to a carefully staged capture, where a few horses are trotted into a pen. Members of the public are positioned at the holding pens, usually during the first few days of a round-up, so they are generally witnessing the horses coming in from areas closest to the round-up site. As days go by, the further out the wranglers go, the more challenging for the horses who are run in large numbers over much longer distances.

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The Views and Opinions Expressed by the author are his or her opinions only and do not necessarily reflect those of this Web-Site or its agents, affiliates, officers, directors, staff, or contractors. The author at the time of this article did not own any shares or receive any consideration financial or otherwise from any company or person mentioned or referred to in the article.

 
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Longtime Advocate Blasts Others in Movement

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Reprinted With Permission From Horseback Magazine

http://horsebackmagazine.com/hb/archives/2573

August 28, 2010

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HOUSTON, (Horseback) – A longtime horse advocate involved with the federal Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Program has blasted front line activists trying to stop massive roundups in the West. Nevada’s Willis Lamm, often labeled a bureau apologist, distributed a harsh screed today to those fighting to stop the agency’s recent accelerated “gather” of Mustangs across the Western states in which scores of animals have died. The death toll is approaching 200 since the BLM begain “gathers” which some say will genetically bankrupt the herds. Lamm targeted several individuals well known in the wild horse advocacy community, however, he declined to name any who he accuses of being “The Hysteria Corps” accusing them of being self appointed experts and journalists. The following is what he wrote:

“It was not that long ago that those who wanted to disparage wild horse advocates would do so by comparing us to groups like the radical arm of PETA or to the Animal Liberation Front. It has taken years of hard work and cohesive interaction for wild horse advocates to earn serious credibility in the eyes of policy makers, the media and moderately conservative citizens. This credibility peaked in early 2010 when a number of lawmakers took up the cause for wild horses and burros. Events over the past year that involved visible mistakes on the part of BLM provided wild horse advocates with opportunities to gain ground by exposing problems within the wild horse program.

It now appears that our credibility as an advocacy camp has begun to decline. This is primarily due to the more radical elements of the horse advocacy camp going off in a number of different, and in some instances bizarre directions.

I was asked to comment on this matter so I’m listing the factions that others and I have observed to be undermining the core effort to protect America’s wild horses and burros.

The Hysteria Corps

The Hysteria Corps, or Drama Queens (and Kings) as some call them, are addicted to sensationalism. They are invested in bizarre, fantastic stories such as truckloads of horses disappearing in the night, BLM running horses off cliffs and a host of other ludicrous concoctions. Given a choice between an implausible but sensational notion and verifiable facts, they will most often ignore the facts and run around with the latest fantastic story.

There are two areas where such conduct is damaging to wild horse advocacy.

First, average people, particularly public officials, get tired of listening to the “boy who cried ‘wolf’.” When the Hysteria Corps finally does get it right, nobody other than other members of the Hysteria Corps is really listening.

Secondly, the Hysteria Corps has had a materially negative effect on the media. Reporters don’t like chasing ghosts and fantasies, and such experiences tend to sour the media on our message. I’ve even received phone calls from reporters complaining about certain obsessive “horse people” and I had to assure them that these people were not associated with our camp.

The Lap Top Experts

The discussion that took place last weekend included a general consensus that at one time the internet was our greatest tool. We used it effectively to promote public awareness. Now it is becoming our Achilles’ heel.

Anyone with basic internet savvy can start a web page or a blog and portray himself or herself as a journalist and/or expert in any subject. You don’t have to have any actual experience or credentials. All you have to do is claim to have “experience” and target an audience that knows less about the subject than you do. Generally what these self-appointed experts accomplish is the establishment of disinformation rings where one “expert” gleans information from other “experts” and the other “experts’” sites. Ultimately a whole cluster of unauthenticated information is laid out as facts before the public. In some instances the laptop experts try to link themselves to legitimate groups and sites. We have found some of these claimed affiliations to be bogus.

To protect their illusions, these self-appointed experts often dismiss the real advocate experts as “undercover BLM agents” or claim that the veteran advocates are jealous of the newcomers. (Jealous of holograms?)

Ultimately the people who actually have relevant experience and who spend hours tracking down and verifying what they report often get lost in all the hoopla generated by the lap top experts. The false and unsubstantiated statements and faulty conclusions presented by the lap top experts provide plenty of examples for those legislators and bureaucrats who would benefit from dismissing the advocates as uninformed zealots. If we are going to be regarded as credible by those people (such as in Congress) who actually have some influence over how DOI and BLM conduct business on our public lands, it is paramount that we maintain our overall credibility as an advocacy camp.

The Self Promoters

The vast majority of wild horse advocates are selfless, caring individuals who work collectively to hold the line and protect America’s wild horses and burros. Not all these personalities get along but they still work together for the common goal. However in every cause there are a few individuals who see the cause as a means to increase their own esteem, to sell something and/or to collect money. Oftentimes the self promoters will present themselves as experts, in some instances offering credentials that they don’t actually have.

The self promoters are easy to spot. Their names are splashed over everything that they are involved with. They, not the horses, are the redundant focal points of their activities. If someone is presenting information under the premise of helping wild horses but the author appears to be suffering from “I strain,” then consider that the material is likely composed to promote the writer. Please judge it carefully before passing it along.

Lawsuits, a new cottage industry

Occasionally a well conceived and well timed lawsuit strikes gold, such as the West Douglas, CO case where BLM was found to have exceeded its authority in its plans to remove horses there. However we are seeing a growing number of gratuitous lawsuits that, if anything, are putting up a bunch of numbers in BLM’s win column. A few lawsuits even appear to be designed to showcase the plaintiffs since they don’t seem to be making any material contribution to the welfare of America’s wild horses and burros. The people filing these lawsuits need to be mindful as to what these lawsuits are actually about. As an example, petitioning the court to hold up an emergency operation so that a specific individual can be present to observe what’s going on is not in the best interest of the horses.

The latest fad seems to be to put up web sites in Orly Taitz style to solicit money to pursue legal cases against the BLM every time a roundup is proposed. The lawsuit fanatics should take notice that on August 16th the Supreme Court upheld a $20,000.00 fine against Orly Taitz for filing frivolous litigation.

Being selective and sensible about pursuing legal actions should help prevent the courts from regarding the wild horse advocates as a growing nuisance. There are still a couple of cases before the courts and they need to be perceived as legitimate and professional attempts to correct problems on our public lands.

In contrast to these splinter factions, the Alliance of Wild Horse Advocates stands for careful mining of the facts, in depth analysis of events and data, objectively presenting facts in the context of our advocacy positions, collectively coming to conclusions, and bringing forth arguments and position statements that are anchored in hard evidence.

This stuff is not glamorous. Most of the work is behind the scenes and out of the public view. Commitment and dedication are required for completing the various tasks. Alliance priorities involve the horses and burros, not promoting the individuals involved in the campaign.

This is a free country and splinter factions can go off in whatever directions that they choose, however the members of the Alliance will remain committed to tried and true core values and the strategic axiom, “When the facts are on our side, we’ll stick to the facts.”

The facts are on our side. We’ll stick to the facts.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_162-20013836-504083.html

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The Views and Opinions Expressed by the author are his or her opinions only and do not necessarily reflect those of this Web-Site or its agents, affiliates, officers, directors, staff, or contractors. The author at the time of this article did not own any shares or receive any consideration financial or otherwise from any company or person mentioned or referred to in the article.

 
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Heavy Cop Presence at Twin Peaks Keeps Contractor Hiding Place Off Limits

Monday, August 30th, 2010

 

Reprinted With Permission From Horseback Magazine http://horsebackmagazine.com/hb/archives/2558

By Steven Long, Photos by Terry Fitch

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TWIN PEAKS, CA (Horseback) – A heavy police presence protected America and the federal Bureau of Land Management wild horse chase contractor from four journalists and no anti-BLM activists at the “gather” held today at Twin Peaks, according to Horseback Magazine’s R.T. Fitch at the site. There were two reporters and a photographer representing the Texas based magazine, as well as a videographer working for the New York Times, a paper which was provided unfettered access earlier this week while other media organizations and citizen observers were kept at bay.

“Why are we being kept away,” the Times photog asked, incredulous that she wasn’t given the same deferential treatment as her colleagues had been afforded earlier in the week before Horseback Online exposed BLM’s media favoritism and attempt spin its story to the powerful national paper.

She was told the captured horses were being held on private land and the landowner had prohibited outsiders from coming on his property, the usual reason BLM has refused access to its trap sites.

Fitch reported there were four armed BLM rangers, one armed sheriff, and multiple agency staff members guarding the two horses captured Friday from the intruding press. She took a photograph of the cars of personnel protecting the contractor from the press. The stampede helicopter and its operators have been the subject of intense scrutiny after scores of horses have died at recent “gathers.” The roundup was called off at 9 a.m. because the helicopter from Cattoor Livestock Roundups of Nephi, UT. could find no horses.

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Fewer and few wild horses are to be found in the West in the wake of relentless roundups by the federal agency. Critics allege they are clearing the animals from the land so it may be leased for cattle grazing.

The chief of the BLM’s security detail at Twin Peaks has refused an on the record interview with Horseback regarding the reason for such a heavy police presence being paid for by the American taxpayers when there has never been an apparent threat.

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The Views and Opinions Expressed by the author are his or her opinions only and do not necessarily reflect those of this Web-Site or its agents, affiliates, officers, directors, staff, or contractors. The author at the time of this article did not own any shares or receive any consideration financial or otherwise from any company or person mentioned or referred to in the article.

 
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The Scene and Herd – Part II of “A Study in Mismanagement and Greed”

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

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By Bobbie Katz

Reporter for crwenewswire.com

The first phase of the roundup of wild horses in northern Elko County, Nevada, is over for the moment but as the Bureau of Land Management prepares for phase two in its goal to remove a total of 12,000 horses from BLM land in 2010, the controversy continues at a fever pitch. Phase one, which was a two-stage roundup, saw the deaths of 12 out of 228 horses in the Tuscarora roundup and 21 out of 636 horses in the “emergency” Owyhee gather, mostly from stress, dehydration, and water intoxication, putting the heat on the BLM once again for what many consider inhumane treatment and unnecessary removal of the animals.

For any animal lover, these deaths of an icon of the American West are certainly a reason to want to blast the BLM into the next state. The agency still bears the ignominy from the disastrous Calico, NV, roundup that ended in February of this year when 158 horses died after being run for miles and miles over rock in the dead of winter In fact, the recent tragedies in the BLM’s gathers have led Senator Mary Landrieu (D-La.) to declare that the BLM has one year to get its act together or lose jurisdiction over the wild horses and burros.

Still, no matter which side one chooses to listen to, big questions still remain as to where the blame for the roundup fiascoes should fall. Is the BLM really the thorn in these horses’ sides that they have been portrayed to be, conducting roundups in circumstances under which they should never be conducted and that are not for the equines’ benefit but rather that of other parties such as cattle ranchers? Or is the agency, like these helpless creatures, fenced in by a law that is in desperate need of amendment or repeal by Congress?

“We manage 179 herd management areas over 10 western states,” explains Tom Gorey, Senior Public Affairs Specialist for BLM Public Affairs. “The current population of horses and burros in those areas is 38,400, which is 12,000 more than our management studies show the land can support. The horses are not allowed to go beyond the boundaries in which they were found roaming in 1971 when the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act was created by Congress for the animals’ protection. But the mandate of that law is for the BLM to manage the land for a thriving ecological balance It says in Section 13.33 of that law that the Secretary of the Interior shall immediately remove excess animals because of size impact from overpopulated herds.”

“We are not removing horses so that we can increase cattle grazing,” he continues. “In actuality, cattle grazing has declined by 30 percent since 1971. We remove the horses for the sustainability of the range. We manage the herds on 26.6 million acres of BLM land and over 5 million acres of non-BLM land, which adds up to 31.9 million acres total. The herds reproduce at a rate of 20 percent per year and we don’t have fertility control for the horses. As a result, over a four-year period, which is how often we conduct the gathers, the herd size has doubled. Forage allocation is done according to land use plans. Wildlife is the first to be affected by the overuse of forage by horses and burros.”

For its part, the media has been intensely critical of the BLM’s handling of the horses and wild burros. And while there is certainly room for questions and opinions, it needs to be noted that the things the agency has done in the past and is trying to implement in the future in favor of the animals have virtually gone unreported.

Such is the case with a press release from Gorey’s office, dated June 3, 2010, which came out before the Tuscarora and Owyhee roundups began. In it, Bureau of Land Management Director Bob Abbey announced that the agency is taking the Federal Wild Horse and Burro Program in an unprecedented new direction – and, on the BLM website, it is seeking public comment, for which the deadline is August 3, 2010, on a Strategy Development Document implementing Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar’s Wild Horse and Burro Initiative. Calling it a new day and stating that there is a need for a fresh look at the program, Abbey said that the BLM will consider the public’s input as it prepares a long-term strategy for the management of America’s wild horses and burros.

Abbey also stated that as the strategy is developed, certain topics and options will not be considered, including the euthanasia of healthy excess animals for which there is no adoption demand (even though it is required by a 1978 amendment to the 1971 Act) and sale “without limitation” to any buyers (required by law by the 2004 Burns Amendment to the 1971 Act). Both of these amendments proved untenable to the BLM (the latter virtually ensures that the animals would end up in slaughterhouses) and the agency never adhered to them, as evidenced by the GAO report of October 2008 that cites the BLM for non-compliance of these articles. According to Gorey, these amendments were also untenable to the majority of Congress, so no action was ever taken against the agency.

The press release contained other information that should be very heartening to horse advocates. Abbey said that other difficult topics and even some controversial options will be up for discussion, among them the implementation of a comprehensive animal welfare program; the potential reintroduction of wild horses or burros into herd areas where they currently don’t exist; increased use of fertility control or other methods to slow population growth; opportunities to make more forage available for wild horse and burro use; the establishment of preserves to care for unadopted wild horses; the designation of selected wild horses and burros as treasured herds; opportunities to place more excess animals into private care, and continued emphasis on science and research to ensure that the BLM is using the best available science to manage wild horse and burro herds now and in the future. Admittedly, to get some of these things accomplished, the BLM, with the aid of the public’s voice, is going to have to get Congress to make some changes to the 1971 Act as it exists today.

Abbey did say that the agency was going to move forward with scheduled gathers in the near term, noting that they were being analyzed and that the public was being engaged in the planning process. When it came to Tuscarora and Owyhee, that latter statement certainly proved false. In fact, even after a court order allowing artist and horse advocate Laura Leigh to attend the Owyhee roundup, she was told that her name was not on the list. In addition, much of the roundup was conducted on private land, thus keeping the public away as well. That has made the mortality of the animals even harder to bear and created more controversy because many people believe that the BLM is hiding the real way the horses are handled from the public.

Admittedly, when it comes to the gathers, the situation is heart-wrenching from any perspective. It may come as a surprise to many but that fact is not lost on the BLM, either.

“When we talk about mortality in these gathers, our goal is zero,” Gorey claims. “We don’t have an acceptable mortality rate but deaths are inevitable. The gather itself may cause deaths. The horses may stumble or break a leg, even in the holding pen. But out of 7,500 horses we gathered last year, we had less than half of 1 percent mortality rate. Any death is regrettable and we would like each one to be preventable.”

In regards to the charges of inhumane treatment of the animals during the gathers, Senior Wild Horse and Burro Specialist Susie Stokke explains the Tuscorora roundup in which 12 horses died.

“There were horses in two pastures – Star Ridge and Dry Creek,” she says. “There was no livestock use in either pasture. There is a water catchment and a pond and the horses will trail 8 to 10 miles to the Owykee River to drink, too. The gather began on July 10. While the horses appeared to be in good body condition, it looked like they hadn’t gotten any water. We rounded up 228 horses but after realizing that some of the horses were drawn up, we suspended operations by 9 a.m. that same day.”

“We then went into an emergency gather on Friday, July 16, and had gathered 636 horses as of Monday, July 19,” she continues. “There were 21 deaths, three of them related to injuries in the corral. The BLM hauled more than 30,000 gallons of water from Monday, July 12, until the end of the roundup to make sure that the horses had enough to drink. In the big picture, Tuscarora and the other gathers are what we are doing under the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act, which charged us with the protection, management, and control of the wild horses and burros. It’s the way the law reads – the removals are addressed in law. Excess horses must be removed for the benefit of wildlife and for the benefit of the horses themselves. Letting Mother Nature take care of its own is a laisse faire policy. We’re charged with a minimalist approach to balance the range.”

By virtue of the 1971 Act, the agency has the responsibility to maintain the herds at the number that were found on the land at the time the law was created (17,000). Stokke, admits to what many horse advocates have maintained for years – that the animals may have been under-counted when the act was instituted.

She and Gorey also both maintain that the published literature stating that there were more than two million horses on the land in 1900 is fallacious and that it came from a book by Frank Dobie called “The Mustangs.” Stokke reiterates, however, that while many of the people who work for the BLM are horse owners and equine enthusiasts who truly love horses, herself included, and that the agency respects and appreciates the horses as icons of the American West, the BLM, as a multiple-use agency, has the responsibility to maintain the balance on the range.

Then, of course, there is the water issue and the fact that animal advocates say that the horses are being denied access to the water because the BLM is allowing ranchers to fence off the water for the benefit of cattle. They point out that the ranchers pay the BLM .$1.35 per cow per month for grazing privileges, which, because of the vast amount of cows, amounts to some $26 million or more a year in revenue for the government. The BLM contends that the horses are not being denied access to water and that it is the natural drought conditions that are causing the problem.

“When you travel to a herd management area, you’ll see private ranch land fenced off for cattle,” Stokke answers. “Owyhee, has one pond and the Desert Ranch Reservoir. It’s fenced-in public land because the water is privately owned. But there are three large gaps in the reservoir fence so that the horses can get water. They also have access to one spring on private lands. However, the balance of water there is an unfenced catchment pond, which is dry because of the drought.”

There still are some seeming inconsistencies, such as how can you have private water rights on public land? And how can you fence off public land and deny access to the water? Then there is the issue of the helicopters used to round up the animals, which horse advocates claim terrify the animals and cause them to stampede. Gorey admits that the horses are under a degree of stress and that the noise disturbs them because it is not a natural noise. But he claims that they are not being stampeded but rather are being moved at a different pace.

“Horses are bred to run to escape from danger,” Stokke adds. “We’re using their natural behavior to get them at a pace we need them to go. The alternative would be inefficient gathers that would be dangerous to the animals. We don’t want to lose any horses. We’ve gathered thousands since 2004.and the mortality rate of the gathers, on average, is less than 1 percent. Over the last 40 years, the BLM has developed standard operating procedures to make the gathers the safest and most humane that they can be. We’ve even developed ways to keep foals with their mothers. What we really need are people to help us either by adopting animals or caring for the animals we have to remove.”

“We are very selective about who we allow to adopt a horse,” Gorey sums up, a point that goes back to the agency not adhering to the the 2004 Burns amendment. “We don;t want to put a horse in the wrong hands. Right now, we have 35,000 horses and burros – mostly horses – in holding facilities. The land can only support 26,600 horses and burros in conjunction with the resources and other uses of public land across the 10 western states. We have only sold 4,100 horses and burros under the Burns Amendment.”

Sometimes it’s necessary to give credit where it is due. One thing is for certain – if the public truly wants to secure the safety and protection of the wild horses and burros, they need to voice their comments on the BLM’s proposed strategy by August 3. The difference between life and death for these magnificent creatures may lie in their hands above all others. It is only the voice of the public that can get Congress to get with the program and change the 1971 Act so that the animals can survive and thrive.

Next: Part III – The 1971 Act — another ill-advised law from Congress – and what they should do about it

The Views and Opinions Expressed by the author are his or her opinions only and do not necessarily reflect those of this Web-Site or its agents, affiliates, officers, directors, staff, or contractors. The author at the time of this article did not own any shares or receive any consideration financial or otherwise from any company or person mentioned or referred to in the article.

 
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