
This website is best viewed in web version. I am dedicated to the preservation, protection, and study of wild Mustangs. While I strive to have 100% accuracy in all of my facts and everything you will read here has been painstakingly researched and is all from reliable sources, if you find something that you think is inaccurate, please comment on it. Inappropriate comments are not published. Thank you!
Our Mission: To Change BLM Managment Tactics
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“It is incredible that one should have to furnish any argument to bring about any laws to save the Mustang, but if there must be an argument let it be this: that of all the things that have played a part in the development of this country, except for man, the horse has played the most important and beneficial role. He portrays the West as all people like to think of it. He is the symbol of wild freedom to us all.”
-Velma B. Johnston, a.k.a. Wild Horse Annie (1959)
There is a battle going on in the United States of America that many people are unaware of. Perhaps they think it’s unimportant, that it doesn’t affect them. The battle to save America’s wild Mustangs isn’t just between soft-hearted horse-lovers and hard-working ranchers. It’s much more complex than that. And in the end… we could all lose.
First of all, I do not support the idea of ceasing all BLM management of wild Mustang herds because since ranching and urbanization has taken over the ranges, and since humans hunt Mustangs' natural predators, the Mustangs would eventually overpopulate, cause habitat degradation, and starve. I must say that in some places the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) helps to care for the wild Mustangs by rounding up herds in places where there's very little food and/or water, and by rounding up Mustangs that wander onto private land (land owned by people). Some people in the BLM sincerely want to protect the Mustangs. Many roundups go without incident; the Mustangs are herded off the range into the holding pens, vaccinated, freeze-branded, and then adopted by loving owners. The BLM has many different facilities, and many are perfectly fine and do help the Mustangs. In some places the BLM is a good thing.
But in most other areas, the BLM uses its authority to take advantage of the animals and the land in its care. Over the past nine years, 40% of the Mustang population has been removed by the BLM for no other reason than rancher and government greed. Alternative methods for managing Mustang populations are available (savethemustanghorses.blogspot.…), and yet the BLM does not use them to any significant extent. Roundup teams are paid roughly $350 for each horse they bring in (dead or alive), so the pilots often go to drastic measures to capture as many horses as possible during each gather. Entire herds of Mustangs (including newborn foals) are driven at breakneck speeds over land deemed too rough for vehicles. Mustangs and burros (wild donkeys) are injured during the roundups and many beyond recovery and must be euthanized. (savethemustanghorses.blogspot.… , savethemustanghorses.blogspot.…)
The BLM openly admits to holding approximately 50,000 Mustangs in captivity (roughly double than there are in the wild), and their finances are running out. It costs roughly $3,000 tax dollars to process a single wild horse for adoption, and hundreds are removed in a typical roundup. It costs around $100,000 every single day to feed the captive Mustangs. Many Mustangs in BLM corrals are in poorer condition than they were and would be in the wild, and some are starving. Almost no BLM facilities provide shelter for the horses held captive. The panicked herd stallions often fight each other in the small spaces, desperately trying to keep their mares together, therefore hurting themselves and others.
"I'm assured repeatedly [by BLM veterinarians] that these horses are cared for," said wild horse advocate Elyse Gardner. "So why does it seem that it is the public observers that continually need to bring so many overlooked injuries, illness or orphaned foals to the attention of the BLM?" Again, alternative methods for managing Mustang populations on the range (so that they need not be removed and held in captivity) are available (savethemustanghorses.blogspot.…), but the BLM does not use them to any significant extent. This shows extreme shortsightedness on the BLM's account. They are wasting enormous amounts of money and causing animals to suffer when less expensive, more humane methods are available.
While many Mustangs do find good homes with kind people, many are sold to irresponsible owners who want to "break a wild bronco". Such owners don’t know how to handle wild horses, and are often injured. If the Mustangs are not adopted or sold, they are rarely ever returned to the wild. The BLM holds unadopted/unsold Mustangs in taxpayer-funded corrals until they either die of old age, they are euthanized, or the BLM gains the right to slaughter them. I repeat: alternative methods for managing Mustang populations on the range (so that they need not be removed and held in captivity) are available (savethemustanghorses.blogspot.…), but the BLM does not use them to any significant extent. The BLM would rather these animals suffered a slow death rather than use alternative methods to manage them.
Recent discoveries made by the National Academy of Sciences (www8.nationalacademies.org/onp… , www.nap.edu/catalog/13511/usin…) has found that by removing so many wild horses in roundups, the BLM is actually causing population growth instead of reducing it. By lowering the population to such an unnaturally small number, the herds become smaller than the carrying limit of the lands (the limit of how many animals can graze on the land before food begins to run out).With so much extra space, the species springs back as it would after a natural disaster or plague. NAS studies show that Mustang populations have been increasing by around 10% to 15% each year. For the BLM to continue their current operation, they will have to remove more and more Mustangs each year, therefore causing increasing population growth, and so on. The answer is clearly not to step up roundups yet again, but to find alternative means by which to control the population and to prevent Mustangs from becoming problems on privately-owned land.
Studies show that nearly 85% of the Mustangs are below genetic viability, meaning that they are inbreeding. By removing Mustangs and their genetic information from the wild, the BLM is forcing the Mustangs to inbreed even more.
Even with the rapid population growth (and therefore rising cost of roundups) if things continue in this manner, in about 50 years there will be no free-roaming Mustangs left. Wildlife biologists estimate that the Mustang will be extinct in the wild before the end of the century. Time is running out for the American Mustang. Will we let them become like the Quagga and the Tarpan, pale ghosts of memory? Your air won’t be any cleaner, your water won’t be any clearer, and your food won’t be any more abundant with Mustangs extinct.
In 1900, over a million Mustangs ran free (lipizzaner-kgirl.deviantart.co…, www.horse-breeds.net/mustangs.… , academickids.com/encyclopedia/… , www.masterliness.com/a/Mustang…).) Now, less than 25,000 of them are left, and that number is steadily falling. Turning our backs is not the answer. We cannot leave Mustangs to their own devices, but we also cannot ignore the damage that the BLM is doing.
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
Symptoms of Insanity
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
BLM Wants to Use Barbaric Sterilization Methods

This is it - the BLM has gone too far. Now the agency wants to perform crude, inhumane and archaic abortion/sterilization experiments on our treasured wild horses that are being kept in an Oregon holding facility.
Once wild and free, the mares will be subjected to an invasive and painful procedure called "ovariectomy via colpotomy," in which a veterinarian places his arm into a mare's vaginal cavity, manually locates the ovaries and rips them out using a rod-like device with a chain on the end. (See picture at top.) The procedure will cause mares in the early and possibly mid-stages of pregnancy to abort their fetuses, and carries a significant risk of pain, hemorrhage, and evisceration (intestines coming through the incision). After the surgery, the BLM intends to turn the mares back out into their corrals, with open incisions and none of the post-operative care that is required for any domestic mares who undergo this painful, surgically-risky and potentially life-threatening procedure.
Please help us demonstrate overwhelming public opposition to this grotesque plan by taking action below!
Oppose Barbaric BLM Sterilization "Experiment" on Wild Mares.
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
BLM Plans to Destroy A Wyoming Mustang Herd

(left to right) Fuego (challenger), Fermat (band stallion), Lovely, Mac, Taylor (Mac's mother), and Hypathia (rare Curly mare) Photo: Ginger Kathrens and Lisa Friday
- Conduct field research to determine the habits and natural behaviors of the White Mountain-Little Colorado using non-invasive techniques (i.e. ground observations/photographs/GPS recorded locations, etc.)
- Conduct behavioral research while field darting with the reversible vaccine PZP. Over 50 mares in these HMAs received PZP-22 in 2011 and will only require a booster shot to render them infertile for 1 to 2 years.
- Conduct any removals in the late winter/spring months using bait or water trapping. Do not chase them with helicopters! Keep traps in place for several weeks to recapture for boostering young mares that did not receive PZP-22 and are not dartable (most, if not all mares in White Mountain, can be field darted). Mares in a trap can be darted without touching them.
- Do not put collars on mares or tail tracker tags on stallions. This is not necessary in the White Mountain HMA. It will require capture and will result in the shattering of the bands just to put on the collars and tail tags.
- Do not operate on the mares. Once sterilized, there is no going back. Those horses would be unable to pass on their genes, and the gene pool would shrink, resulting in inbreeding and/or eventual eradication of the entire herd.
- Raise the AML of 79-100 in Little Colorado to a genetically viable number of 150-200 adult animals. Reduce livestock grazing. There are 6,000 cows with potentially 6,000 calves or 30,000 head of sheep in the two legally designated wild horse herd management areas.
- Collaborate with interested organizations and individuals to conduct the above field darting and record-keeping. (Data sheets are already compiled for over 200 of the White Mountain wild horses!)
- Save millions of taxpayer dollars and manage the herds on the range, living in freedom with their families.
What can you do?
Send your comments to:
Wild Horse and Burro Specialist
BLM Rock Springs Field Office
280 Highway 191 North
Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901
Fax: (307) 352-0329
Electronic comments must be sent to the following email address to be considered: Rock_Springs_WYMail@blm.gov
(Include "White Mountain & Little Colorado EA Comments" in the subject line.)
Please do what you can! This is nothing more than a wild horse extermination plan dressed up as a research project. Time is short, send your comments by days end Thursday, January 14. Thanks!


Monday, November 30, 2015
Starving Mustangs?
The few Mustangs that are starving are starving because their food and water has been fenced off for cattle. Many HMAs and other wildlife reserves are placed on inhospitable and infertile land, often with little to no water, and the rich, healthy land is given to cattle. With few to no natural predators (due to hunting by humans,) Mustangs in such places are known to overpopulate easily, just like deer and various native wildlife. As such, those particular herds need more management than herds on suitable HMAs.
The BLM, ranchers, and anti-Mustang groups use these select starving herds as "proof" that all Mustangs in the wild are starving to death, and they claim that wild horse advocates are ignoring the fact that these herds are starving. This, of course, is ludicrous. The fact that a few herds are starving does not mean that all herds are starving. There are starving people in the United States. Does that mean everyone in the United States is starving? Of course not. Wild horse advocates are completely aware of these herds, and we have nothing against removing and/or relocating them in order to help them. We just want it to be done humanely. In order to effectively manage wild horse populations, the BLM must manage herds individually, not nation-wide. When a herd needs help, help them, not a herd in another state. Removing herds that don't need help only damages the gene pool. Healthy herds would be better helped through preventative measures, such as fertility drugs and by being kept in check by predators (cougars, bear, wolves, coyotes, etc.)
There is more than enough public land to comfortably house all the Mustangs and an appropriate number of cattle. At the time being cattle outnumber Mustangs 50 to 1. There are currently more than 3,000,000 beef cattle on public grazing lands, around 1,000,000 sheep on publics grazing lands, and fewer than 25,000 Mustangs on all American wild lands combined. Grazing on public lands is a privilege, not a right, and can be taken away. But while Mustangs are being squeezed out of their legal lands and managed to extinction, no one is managing the ranchers. Cattle are rotated, but the land is so run down that wildlife rarely ever return to it during its vacant periods, if wildlife return at all. On top of that, cattle that share land with Mustangs provide only 3% of the beef that America uses.
Occasionally large-scale natural disasters such as droughts and floods will take away graze or water from healthy herds, and in those cases, the only kind thing to do is remove them for temporary holding. After the drought has cleared, then they can either be released or adopted out.
Monday, November 23, 2015
PTH's "Horses in Crisis" video EXPOSED!
Cattle activists are featured prominently in the video as if they have complete knowledge of the situation. Ironically, not a single wild horse advocate is interviewed, even though they are talked about extensively. By only interviewing one side of the issue, the video deliberately hides the entire other half of the story. Protect the Harvest is actively and intentionally attempting to deceive its audience.
The video does have one accurate point, though: the BLM has too many horses in captivity to take care of them all, and caring for them is already incredibly expensive. However, instead of looking for alternatives to removals (such as on-the-range management), the video says the only answer is to kill the horses. It doesn't even mention on-the-range management. It pretends it doesn't exist.
I generally don't devote an entire journal to critiquing a single video, but there is an anti-Mustang subculture on DeviantART that gets its information from this video. Indeed, they quote it frequently. As such, it needs to be addressed.
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www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307…
www.thepetitionsite.com/takeac…
scholarship.law.umt.edu/cgi/vi…
www.publiclandsranching.org/ht…
static1.squarespace.com/static…
www.mikehudak.com/Articles/Che…
lshs.tamu.edu/docs/lshs/end-no…
www.biologicaldiversity.org/pu…
www.fs.fed.us/rm/pubs_rm/rm_gt…
www.publiclandsranching.org/ht…
www.thewildlifenews.com/2012/1…
www.gazettetimes.com/news/loca…
www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307…
vegetarian.procon.org/sourcefi…
www.publiclandsranching.org/ht…
www.mikehudak.com/Articles/CTN…
www.livestrong.com/article/372…
www.livestrong.com/article/507…
www.beechhillbison.com/buffalo…
www.komonews.com/news/consumer…
www.consumerreports.org/cro/vi…
www.merriam-webster.com/dictio…
www.horseoftheamericas.com/
www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/ho…
horsebreedslist.com/horse-bree…
www.equinenow.com/mustangbreed…
www.livescience.com/27686-must…
www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/prog/graz…
Since 1988, the wild horse population of Maryland’s Assateague Island has been successfully managed at 150 animals using the contraceptive vaccine PZP developed with the help of the Humane Society of the United States. Dr. Jay Kirkpatrick is assisting the BLM in implementing this non-intrusive contraceptive method across a growing number of herd management areas.
The method has proven very successful, is easy to administer (via remote darting of the mares) and does not disrupt the complex social structure of wild herds. Fertility drugs are also far less expensive than roundups. It costs roughly $300 - $500 to process a single wild horse for adoption, whereas it costs a maximum of around only $100 to render a mare infertile for at least two years. A March 2004 USGS study found that $7.7 million could be saved annually through the use of contraceptive measures alone. Unfortunately, the BLM only allots 6% of its budget to fertility drugs and other forms of on-the-range management.
ECONOMICAL BONUS: Fertility drugs are far, far less expensive to create, obtain, and distribute than the costly roundup operation currently in progress. Also, it could help to generate jobs that many people can perform, seeing as the darter mustn't pay for years of flight training prior to being hired.
- Rounding up Mustangs on horseback – If the fertility drug campaign must be supplemented by removals, similar to the horses on Assateague, running small-scale roundups of Mustangs on horseback (also like Assateague) would be an appropriate measure. Obviously, horseback roundups could never be a complete replacement for helicopter roundups due to the risks of injury to riders and domestic horses, but if done on a small scale and only as a supplement to fertility drugs, they would be much more humane. Mustangs would only be driven as fast as the saddle-horses can run. If the saddle horses can't take it, neither can the Mustangs. Obviously, this refers to galloping after a herd on horseback to gather them toward the capture corral, not using lassos to drag home each individual Mustang. No, it's not a perfect solution, but coupled with others, it can be part of one (notice I listed many options). One con to this solution is that the land must be mapped out previously, but seeing as the BLM has access to helicopters that shouldn't be a problem. Another downside is that it poses a risk of injury to saddle horse and rider. But look at it this way: people have been rounding up wild horses on horseback for thousands of years. Wild horses typically respond well to other horses with a herd instinct instead of with the terror that a helicopter induces.
- Ending/restricting human hunting of predators or possibly releasing existing predators into the wild – Predators would help to naturally manage the Mustang population, therefore giving less need for roundups. Unfortunately, Mustangs' natural predators are hunted by trophy hunters and by ranchers to protect their livestock, and thus they are less effective at controlling Mustang populations than they could be. While trophy hunting is pure selfishness (killing for pleasure), hunting to protect livestock at least has a purpose. However, there are other, non-lethal methods of protecting livestock from large predators. In Namibia, large dogs are trained to live with and protect sheep and cattle from cheetahs.
Mustangs and native wildlife were thriving before humans came and hunted their predators. By killing herbivores' natural predators, humans have hurt the ecosystems, causing wildlife, including Mustangs, to move into places where they didn't live before and/or to overpopulate.
One con for this is that the predators are dangerous to domestic animals such as cattle, sheep, domestic horses, and dogs. Hunting laws about predators make it legal to shoot a lion that gets on your property. If for some reason you can't shoot the lion, you can get help from the government. If someone’s going to plant himself in lion country, he’s going to have to deal with it. Killing off the native predators is not the answer.
ECONOMICAL BONUS: Hiring rangers to inspect wildlife would be much less costly than the expensive roundup operation currently underway.
- Giving helicopter pilots a set salary – Instead of paying pilots for each horse they bring in, by paying them a set salary, pilots would be less apt to drive Mustangs beyond their limits and BLM could save money. ECONOMICAL BONUS: Instead of paying each pilot $350 for each horse, the general amount of money poured into roundups could very well be greatly reduced. All in all, the U.S. would save a bit of cash.
- Deducting from pilots/roundup employees’ salaries or firing employees if animals are injured during a gather – Mustangs would be treated with greater care and respect.
- Bait-trapping – This could be a supplement to fertility drugs alongside horseback removals. Mustangs are lured by tasty treats such as alfalfa cubes (and with food and water in other areas) and therefore enter the corral at their own will. A con with bait-trapping is that predators such as wildcats like to prey on the captured horses, but a proper watch will prevent wildcat attacks. Currently, the BLM sets only one employee to guard the corral. It would be wiser to post two or more guards. That way, one can watch while the others sleep so he can frighten off at or kill any predator that gets too close. ECONOMICAL BONUS: Bait-trapping would reduce the need for helicopter roundups, which are incredibly expensive. It would also help to generate jobs for individuals who are willing to learn the ropes (no pun intended), instead of pouring huge amounts of money into a single man who already had enough money to afford helicopter flight training.
- More uses of Judas-horses during roundups – Mustangs follow the domestic horse instinctively and are less traumatized. Fortunately, the BLM already uses Judas horses quite often.
- Placing fencing or some kind of deterrent around the perimeters of HMAs (Herd Management Areas) / creating a large sanctuary for the horses --
While this would take a lot of effort and work to start up and a significant amount of work to maintain, it will help prevent wild Mustangs from roaming out of their designated lands and therefore reduce the need for roundups in general. In the long run it would most likely pay itself off. It would be extremely beneficial for "checkerboard" lands (lands that contain one square mile of HMA next to one square mile of cattle graze, back and forth, and so on). Instead of forcibly removing entire herds and thinning the gene pool, Mustangs could be managed within their HMAs through remotely-delivered fertility drugs and/or the other alternatives I have described. At least one water source would have to be provided within each fenced HMA. ECONOMICAL BONUS: Creating and maintaining the fencing would also help to generate jobs that the average laymen could perform, and by providing jobs may help reduce the dependency on government welfare and therefore take a piece of the load off the economy.
- Managing cattle and sheep ranchers as well as Mustangs – by returning to the Wild Horse and Burro Act, all the animals on public rangelands would be safer and more comfortable.
Fortunately, the answer is clear as to what has changed: cattle. By the time cattle ranching appeared on the American scene, free-roaming horses had been in the wild for over 300 years. Domestic cattle and sheep currently number around 4 million on public lands, and have numbered over 6 million in the past. They outnumber Mustangs 50 to 1 in most states, and 200 to 1 in others. That's 3 million more than there ever were of Mustangs on those same lands, and 160% more than the modern Mustang population. The huge cattle and sheep populations have pushed out native wildlife and Mustangs, displacing wildlife and causing them to live in and eat plants that are unnatural for them to eat. Although cattle are rotated seasonally, there are still millions on the land at any given time. Even when a space of land is evacuated, it is typically so run-down that wildlife do not move back into it. Thus, cattle move back and keep the land as their own. Even though it's clear that cattle greatly outnumber Mustangs and are also forcing Mustangs and other wildlife into unnatural and often inhospitable areas, anti-Mustang groups continue to argue that Mustangs, not cattle, are the true invasive animal. They say that because Mustangs are non-native, that they are automatically invasive. However, they completely ignore an enormous factor in the equation: cattle and sheep, the other non-native species. It's not logical to ignore the more abundant, newer, non-native animal and choose to accuse the rarer non-native animal that has lived in North America for hundreds of years longer, and also lives in populations much, much smaller than it used to, back when the ecology of the land was relatively harmonious. Since Mustang populations are lower than they ever have been, it's not logical to pin all the blame on them. The main cause of degradation to public lands is cattle and sheep, not Mustangs. Cows graze within a mile of water, often standing in it until the water is so soiled it’s unusable for some time, while wild horses are highly mobile, grazing from five to ten miles from water, at higher elevations, on steeper slopes, and in more rugged terrain. Horses and donkeys also have solid hooves which don’t tear apart the earth nearly as much as a cow’s cloven hoof. A congressionally-mandated study by the National Academy of Sciences found that wild horse forage use remains a small fraction of cattle forage use on public ranges. Private livestock outnumber wild horses at least 50 to 1 on public lands. (4 million cattle and sheep > 25,000 Mustangs.)
The video then goes on to describe how “history tells us that these horses will starve to death and have a catastrophic die-off.” Of course, he doesn’t give us an example of this happening in history. He just expects us to believe him. The video also completely ignores the fact that Mustangs have been in North America for over 500 years and are not having a catastrophic die-off, except in BLM corrals.
The few Mustangs that are starving are starving because their food and water has been fenced off for cattle. HMAs and wildlife reserves are typically placed in extremely inhospitable areas and are unable to sustain even native wildlife. There is more than enough public land to comfortably house all the Mustangs and an appropriate number of cattle. At the time being cattle outnumber Mustangs 50 to 1. There are currently more than 3,000,000 beef cattle on public grazing lands, around 1,000,000 sheep on public grazing lands, and fewer than 25,000 Mustangs on all American wild lands combined. Grazing on public lands is a privilege, not a right, and can be taken away. But while Mustangs are being squeezed out of their legal lands and managed to extinction, no one is managing the ranchers. Cattle are rotated, but the land is so run down that wildlife rarely ever return to it during its vacant periods, if wildlife return at all. On top of that, cattle that share land with Mustangs provide only 3% of the beef that America uses.
Occasionally natural disasters such as droughts and floods will take away graze or water and the only kind response is to try to take special action, but that’s relatively rare.
I just have to mention one thing that stood out to me here: one of the ranchers interviewed describes his cattle as being like members of his family. I found this alagory confusing and a little disturbing. Is he saying that he raised his cattle to be his pets? If not, it means he was raising them for meat, which is what the majority of ranchers raise cattle for. Does this mean that he views his family members as meat..?
The video also implies that the lack of business for ranchers is somehow Mustangs’ fault. However, ranchers are the victims of changing public tastes, not horses. American beef consumption has been in decline for the past 10 years.
Unfortunately, Mustangs' natural predators are hunted by trophy hunters and by ranchers to protect their livestock, and thus they are less effective at controlling Mustang populations than they could be. While trophy hunting is pure selfishness (killing for pleasure), hunting to protect livestock at least has a purpose. However, there are other, non-lethal methods of protecting livestock from large predators. In Namibia, large dogs are trained to live with and protect sheep and cattle from cheetahs.
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Sign the Petition to Promote PZP
Sign this Petition to urge the BLM to increase PZP use and decrease helicopter roundups!
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Zero Herd Policy: Obama’s War On Wild Horses – Gone In 20 Years
Zero Herd Policy: Obama’s War On Wild Horses – Gone In 20 Years
Backdrop
The Round-Up

Rachel Reeves has an entire photo essay on the Thanksgiving roundup by the BLM.
Current Mistreatment


Finally, some hay.

The group has a Facebook page if anyone wants to stay up to date on the status of the horses. Those interested in adopting a horse can find additional details on the BLM website.