Wild Horses Issues

Justice for Horses

 
     
 
 
 

 

History-making Wild Horse Settlement

Horse Territory

A "significant victory" for horse lovers, that's how the attorney representing a coalition of animal advocates is characterizing an agreement reached with the US Forest Service.

The group is dropping a lawsuit filed to protect a herd of nearly 400 horses roaming the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest near Heber.

In exchange, the Forest Service will solicit public comment on how the wild horses living on the forest should be managed. The Forest Service must also recognize: wild horses as "an integral part of the system of public lands".

The deal was two years in the making. It stems from a fight over what to do with the herd of horses near Heber. The Forest Service believed they were strays that had wandered through broken fence line onto forest land from the White Mountain Apache Reservation. Forest managers initially wanted the animals rounded up and sold at auction. Horse lovers feared they would end up going to slaughter.

Under the agreement, horses deemed "wild" will be federally protected. Attorney Tony Merrill says "wild" means any members of the herd that are unbranded or unclaimed. Those animals will have to be managed by the forest service taking into account the public's comments and concerns.

If you'd like to contact the Forest Service regarding this issue, send your comments with this form:

Document Comment Form


 

WILD HORSE SALE AND ADOPTION

If you are interested in buying a wild horse or burro for long-term care, please call the BLM toll-free at 1-800-710-7597 or e-mail them at wildhorse@blm.gov.

The BLM is committed to their Adoption Program, which is unchanged by the new laws under the Burns amendment and will remain separate from the new sale authority program. Additional information on adoption events around the country can be found at www.wildhorseandburro.blm.gov.

Breathtaking, sturdy, healthy horses can be still be adopted or bought now, through the BLM. Because of changes in law due to the Burns amendment, buyers do not have to maintain horses in certain conditions. Previously, BLM adoptions required humane care conditions, fencing, and the like be maintained for one year before people would get title to a horse. Since there are over 6,000 wild horses now slated for sale, we suggest you look into those--the ones at greatest risk (ages - weanling to teenagers) first IF you have horse experience; a fair amount of time to spend patiently several days a week with a horse(s); AND the facilities required by the adoption agreement. Even though buyers of sale horses aren’t required to have the fencing that adopters have, it’s a VERY good idea to follow those requirements for everyone’s well being.

Note from the Late Trina Bellak AHDF Founder

People should not be afraid to adopt and keep a wild horse. There are wild horse mentors out there who will help you work with your horses and if you have never trained a horse it would be good to seek out this help. Some are easier to befriend and domesticate than others. People think stallions are the hardest, but that is not necessarily true. I have adopted a wild horse (a two-year-old), and have never had one day of trouble. Over the years, I have trained about 165-175 horses and my adopted wild horse was one of the easiest to train.

Of course, we wish wild horses were all left free, but if they are in the clutches of the BLM, giving one or more a humane, safe and loving home is a good deed.

 

What's Going on in Congress?

Thomas.gov

HR 1018 (wild horses) •
HR 503 (horse slaughter) •
S 727 (horse slaughter) •

It is a crucial time for our nation's horses and they need our support now more than ever. Congress will decide whether horses in the U.S. are protected as our loyal companions or sacrificed to slaughterhouses. Your show of support for horses can make all the difference.

 

WHY AMERICA SHOULD PROTECT WILD HORSES:

INTERVIEW WITH TRINA BELLAK ESQ., AHDF PRESIDENT AND FOUNDER

Trina Bellak, Esq. Founder of American Horse Defense Fund (AHDF) was interviewed in July 2005 during a live broadcast on a California-based radio show on KWMR. The show was one in a series regarding symbols of American history and folklore.

To a great many in America, the wild horse is not just an icon of freedom, but a living treasure of the pioneer spirit of America to which we owe a debt of gratitude as the loyal companions that our country rode in on. Still other Americans feel this is mere sentiment and view wild horses as a natural resource that holds no significance outside of for-profit industry. Ms. Bellak put forth the view of the AHDF, animal/horse lovers, and that shared by the horse protection field, regarding why wild horses should be protected as an important part of America’s past, present, and future.

Questions:

    Are wild horses native to our continent and America?

    Answer:


  • Yes, wild horses are native to North America. Until recently, it was commonly believed that a primitive type horse died out in North America some 8,000-10,000 years ago and the modern horse was re-introduced by the Spanish in the early 1500's. Now, scientific evidence in the form of a nearly intact ancient horse carcass shows us that the horse evolved here to a finished form, then went extinct, and was re-introduced.

Questions:

    What role did horses play in Native American culture?

    Answer:


  • Horses were essential to the survival of Native Americans. Horses were both caught and tamed in order to be ridden for transport and it was very important to have horses for hunting in order to provide food for tribe members. The horse was greatly revered by Native Americans. They were thought of as very special animals and were treated with much respect. Gifts of horses between Native Americans were of real significance and a great honor. There is no doubt that Native Americans would not have survived without horses. Horses, of course, are also strongly associated with American history and culture.

Questions:

    What is your personal connection to horses and specifically wild horses?

    Answer:


  • I have been involved with horses for over 35 years. I fell in love with the horse’s beauty and majestic nature, as do so many people. My interest was sparked at the age of two when I was read the story of Black Beauty and insisted on being read the story weekly for years. At age nine, I began riding classes which lead to participation in many different types of competitions and shows. At age twelve I was horrified to learn that the federal government was rounding up and killing our wild horses. I, along with millions of Americans, mainly children, worked to help pass the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Protection Act (WHBA) that would end the government’s needless and massive roundup and slaughter of America’s wild horses. Many horrified Americans voiced opposition to the roundups and slaughter thanks to Velma Johnson, known as ‘Wildhorse Annie’ who campaigned all over the U.S. initiating a letter writing campaign that generated more mail to congress than any other issue ever, except the Vietnam war. I and several close friends held bake sales and used book sales to raise money to support the campaign. This experience developed my interest in horse and animal welfare and taught me that animals can suffer at the hands of the government. The government round up of wild horses at this time involved deploying people on horseback that roped horses with tires that the animals would drag until they dropped from exhaustion. The collapsed horses would then be taken away in vans to slaughter for pet food and chicken feed. Wild Horse Annie broke the news of this largely unknown massive killing campaign to the world. She got the public involved and was a one-woman campaign to save wild horses. It’s highly probable that without her, we would have few if any wild horses today.
  • In 1971 there were 303 herd areas that were supposed to be protected and managed “principally”, although not exclusively, for wild horses and burros. The WHBA allowed for “mixed use” and for other animals as well. But today only 185 wild horse herd areas remain and the agency charged with protection and preservation of these animals (and management of public lands), the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), continues to “zero out (remove all horses/burros, illegally in our opinion) from land they have thrived on for many decades.

Questions:

    Where can wild horses be found in the US?

    Answer:


  • Mainly in the western states - although people may not always see them on hiking trips near populated areas. Nevada has the highest population, about 17,000 wild horses. California, Arizona, Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Wyoming have smaller populations. Small isolated populations also exist in North Carolina, Virginia, Louisiana and Maryland. There is also a small population of totally isolated wild horses on Hawaii that has not been disturbed for hundreds of years and few are aware of who aren’t valley residents.

Questions:

    Is it difficult to view wild horses?

    Answer:


  • It is not that hard, but you will have usually to travel to remote areas to see them. The AHDF holds annual riding trips for people to see the last free, unmanaged wild horses in the US. We take groups out on horseback for about 4 days to observe and track the horses, see new foals, band and bachelor stallions, and study their behavior. Trips are arranged so riders view many beautiful natural sites that you would be unlikely to see on your own. Our next trip wild horse trip will be in late May in Nevada and we also host a fabulous riding/sight seeing trip in February on the islands of Hawaii and Kauai (See EVENTS—this issue).

Questions:

Adversaries of wild horse protection like to say that horses are at odds with the environment and cause damage to plant life and the survival of other animal life.
    What is your answer to this argument? Are there ecological and environmental benefits of having wild horses?

    Answer:


  • Yes. Because wild horses are in fact a native species to North America, such arguments are entirely false. Wild horses contribute to the environment in very important ways including the dispersal of intact seed from native plants. In fact their manure helps to keep plants alive in some areas and it is essential to the creation of hummus in the building of soil in arid regions. When wild horses die, black bear, bobcat, wild dogs and mountain lions use them as an important food source. In cold winters, wild horses can paw through ice to expose water also making water available to smaller animals that can’t break through ice. Likewise, in the summer, wild horses can locate water sources using their sense of smell.
  • Wild horses do not stay in small isolated areas. They roam about 10 miles a day and can survive by visiting a watering hole every 3-4 days. Wild horses will not trample watering holes but simply drink, sometimes dunking to cool off before leaving in warm weather. In this regard, they are much gentler to land than cattle which are not roaming animals, are lazier and harder on the areas they inhabit. Cattle will camp out near water sources and create mudholes of them. They likewise decimate vegetation. Wild horses also play an important role in the prevention of wild fires by eating dry plant matter and they are driven to do so. As an example, I can think of my former wild horse who astonished everyone the first couple of years I had her, when she methodically ate all the dead leaves that fell each fall. Wild horses have evolved to be very efficient and often exist on what domesticated horses wouldn’t consider feed sources. Even in captivity and in regular work, they eat less than domestic horses. Wild horses also have legendary hooves of great strength, soundness and endurance that put domestic horses to shame.

Questions:

    Is the AHDF involved with any other horse welfare groups or in-the-field scientists?

    Answer:


  • The AHDF is a part of several large alliances that work to protect wild horses such as umbrella coalitions like the Wild Horse and Burro Freedom Alliance and the American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign. Both of these groups include dedicated and renowned scientists and researchers who have been involved in studying wild horses in the field for many years. These individuals do have correct information on population numbers and the huge value of having wild horses on our land. They have become aware of a whole host of problems created by government programs that are trying to scapegoat wild horses for problems caused, in fact, by the wealthy, small, private livestock industry. But you don’t have to be a scientist or mathematician to realize who is doing the overgrazing of our public lands. With 4.2+ million head of cattle in US grazing in wild west areas and an estimated mere 25,000 wild horses, the answer is clear.
  • The government is constructing fencing for grazing permittees in order to keep cattle in and this is a big problem because it severely limits the area that horses may graze in and of course, in some instances, forces them to overgraze in order to survive.

Questions:

    Do wild horses benefit at all from roundups from public lands?

    Answer:


  • There is not one rationalization I can think of that roundups are good for wild horses. The BLM adoption program has allowed some lucky people to share their lives with wild horses over the last few decades, but many horses have suffered neglect, abuse and even death as a result of the round ups and adoptions that are poorly regulated. It does not make them healthier as is often claimed. Inbreeding problems are created only by our own terrible design of fencing in wild horse populations. Also, it has been proven that removal of wild horses and even deer, cause those remaining to breed earlier and more actively to try and maintain their populations—it’s a basic survival instinct and its not good to have two-year-old fillies being bred.
  • The AHDF and other organizations often go head to head with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) on many policies. The BLM is allowed to interpret and enforce certain laws while being under pressure from livestock/cattle interests and politicians who would benefit from policies that eliminate wild horses. The most significant and recent example is the Burns amendment that was added to the annual Appropriations Bill passed by Congress last November. The amendment covertly introduced by Senator Conrad Burns (R-MT) struck out part of the Wild Horse and Burro Act (the Act) that forbid the sale and slaughter of wild horses. These protections were removed under pressure from a small group of wealthy, influential cattle ranchers. Less than 3% of beef raised and eaten in the US is actually from cattle grazed on our public lands. These ranchers could graze on private land, but they want super cheap grazing on public lands. I spoke with a BLM wrangler who conducted the roundup that my horse Sonoma Star came from. He told me that during that particular roundup, he was to capture 120 horses but he turned about 18 of them out because there just wasn’t the need to remove so many. He told me it was a rare winter when the cattle in that range even saw the horses who came to lower elevations just during the odd extra snowy winter when grazing at their usual higher elevations wasn’t adequate. There is plenty of land, but horses are forced into such a small part of it. This is public land that belongs to all of us not just to cattle ranchers.