Public Lands, Public Horses

The Roundup

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Nothing in wild horse advocacy is as controversial as a roundup

 

The act of removing our wild horses and burros off of public land draws attention to the issue. However the roundup is the moment we have failed to manage our wild horses on the land.

There are two very distinct parts of the BLM Wild Horse and Burro Program. Everything that happens to a wild horse before the roundup is controlled at the field and state level; paychecks for employees come from an allotted amount to each state. Everything that happens after the wild horse when it enters the holding system is controlled by a national hub; paychecks for employees come direct from that hub.

Employees that operate at the field level are not intimately involved in holding. Employees at facilities are not intimately knowledgable about the range program. However both will present as an "authority" for the other as the memo simply gets repeated. Instead of admitting a deficit of knowledge many simply speak and it can cause a lot of misinformation. 

Management on the range is actually made more difficult by large scale removals. Large scale removals increase birth rates in a destabilized population. 

In a program void of basic data we continue an archaic system of wild horse management that has not changed much in nearly 50 years. 

WHE has designed, has assisted in designing, has been advocating for a decade; large scale data protocols with a temporary fertility control component. We can slow birth rates as we generate sound management practices based on ground data, not politics or old bad habits. 

Every project we have worked years to begin to actualize has been suspended by the federal government without legal, moral or ethical reasons. 

What Happens at a Roundup

Our documentation includes multiple instances of avoidable injuries, abusive actions and intentional neglect. Wild horses left with no water after capture and a contractor refusing to refill tubs in triple digit heat. Foals electric shocked. Wild horses kicked in the head, dragged with a rope, trailer doors slammed on legs causing injury. Foals run to collapse. Our documentation has even shown a helicopter hitting a horse with it's skids. 

Wild Horse Education has the largest library of wild horse documentation in the world.  Wild Horse Education is the only organization to take inhumane conduct into a courtroom, in history. (We are in process of migrating content to this site. Roundups pre-2018 can be found by using the search bar in our archive website WildHorseEducation.org)

There are distinction between intentional injury, intentional neglect, preventable injury and an unforeseen event. Years of first hand, extremely extensive, documentation led to acceptance of our founder as an expert witness to roundup protocol during litigation. 

Our work was the driving force to create the first humane handling policy for our wild horses. The policy needs revision and better enforcement.  

For roundup photos go to our archives by clicking the button below. We are updating this site to include roundups by date and place. But be patient, we are still using the blog format for current roundups and you can find them by scrolling or using the search bar by clicking the button below.

After capture wild horses are separated from family and shipped to holding facilities. There wild horses are branded and entered into a system of inventory. Prior to a foal being branded at 3-5 months of age it does not appear in inventory. Foal mortality and spontaneous abortion (miscarriage) post capture are not tracked in a statistical data base. 

If a wild horse survives capture it has to survive in holding. Death statistics post capture have been removed from the BLM website. In one winter roundup at the Eagle Complex the death toll in a closed door facility (Broken Arrow, Indian Lakes) rose to dozens of horses each week from broken necks, broken backs and respiratory illness.

BLM currently has no national protocol for infectious disease in facilities. 

If a wild horse is adopted or sold the dangers do not end there. 

BLM runs an adoption program where a wild horse retains it's status as federally protected for a one year period. After that the adopter gets a title, much like on a car, the wild horse loses it's status as "wild" and is governed by the same laws as any domestic horse. 

BLM also runs a "sale program" where a wild horse can be purchased for as little as $5. 

In 2012 an investigation into the BLM sales program uncovered nearly 1800 wild horses sold to one kill-buyer for $5. each. 

At an Advisory Board meeting in 2016 the board voted to "fast track" wild horses into the sales program. Mustangs showing up in kill pens have increased steadily. It is unknown at this time if this is due to the larger number of wild horses being sold to clear holding pens (inventory dropped by nearly 20,000 wild horses in a 18 month period).  BLM does not keep inventory records online and BLM FOIA offices are not answering difficult requests, including inventory and sales.

Now that BLM has space in holding the restrictions on removals are lifting. BLM roundup numbers are increasing to satisfy profit driven interests on public lands.

This video was first released in 2011. In the multiple release formats it has been viewed over 5 million times.

At Wild Horse Education we get multiple requests each day asking us to search for an adopters mustang in our roundup photos. We try to answer each request but our time is limited. We realize that your mustang is "not just a number." We wish BLM did too and provided you with a photo at intake or roundup. 

We are working on creating a searchable photo record for the public. We have literally hundreds of thousands of images. It may take us some time. For now you can find some of the early roundup coverage from WHE on our archived site at WildHorseEducation.org

 
 
 

How we work

Foundation; Hard Facts

Wild Horse Education is an organization devoted to the hard truths of public land and wild horse management. Our work first builds a baseline of information that includes field data, historic information and existing protocol. That information is applied strategically toward changing policy. Educating the public, media, legislators and the court system is a challenge. Addressing long entrenched cronyism is essential. 

We often reference our work as "tool building."

Field work

Engaging the public, the media, legislators or the courts begins in field.

Our teams have amassed the largest library of wild horse captures in the last decade.

  • This data was used as the basis for litigation that changed policy on handling and on access to wild horses and burros. 
  • This data has been used in multiple investigations including exposing a large number of wild horses sold to one kill buyer.
  • This information has provided multiple adopters with some history of where their horse came from and how it was captured. Our wild horses are not "just a number." 

Our teams have created trend data maps on herd movement, behavior and range conditions in various Herd Management Areas (HMAs).

  • This data is used for site specific engagement that can create templates for long term preservation of our wild horses and the wild places they live in.
  • Our data has assisted in the creation of site specific management plans; some have made it to the field level but are "on hold." We continue to design projects and are attempting to bring them into actualization.
  • Our teams have created reports requested by various oversight agencies and government officials to shed a light on massive propaganda presented by industry. 
  • This information provides a baseline to fight against habitat loss.

In order to create a better reality for wild horses the conversation must begin with the reality the wild horse lives every single day.

Dollar for dollar WHE is leading  the way; creating change, not creating a profit line. 

 

Fast FAQs

We know that the world our wild horses live in can seem complicated. Below we list the most commonly asked questions and links for further reading. We hope this helps you begin your wild, wild horse education!

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Livestock

BLM allows over 700,000 cow/calf pairs or 1,400,000 cows to graze on public land. In contrast, the BLM claims public land can only sustain about 27,000 wild horses. 

Nearly 8 times the amount of public land is legally authorized for livestock use than is authorized for a wild horse to legally occupy.

This gets more disturbing when within the small areas occupied by wild horses (11% of public land) livestock is often authorized 80% of the grass that grows on our public lands.

Private livestock are the most destructive use of federal grazing land and highly subsidized by the tax payer. It is estimated that these subsidizes have risen to over $1 billion dollars just in the last decade.

Private livestock on public land produces less than 3% of beef in the US. 

This is not about feeding the nation. This is about control of public land, politics and the continuation of a subsidy program. 

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sage grouse

There has been discussion over the last decade to list the Greater Sage Grouse under the Endangered Species Act. The reasons for the need for protection stem from habitat loss. 

Instead of listing the bird powerful lobby interests for industry that reaps a massive profit off of public land has thrown big money into solidifying their political stranglehold. Big money went into political campaigns for those that would stop the listing in any way they could. Some of this funding went into supporting "front groups" that masquerade as public interest and attack the environmental movement as "bad for the public."

Sage grouse protections are nothing but a political poker game now, a farce. One example are projects that clear trees, not for sage grouse habitat issues, but to make widening roads easier for mining trucks and more room for cow chow to grow.

Wild horses, an issue weakly represented in high politics, has become an easy target on this list of "remove anything in the way of big profit lines." 

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extraction

Extractive industry in the US includes mineral mining, oil and gas. These projects draw massive private profits off of public resources. The few regulations we have in place have only allowed us to mitigate some of the damage done to public lands. The damages range from massive oil spills to contamination of ground water with arsenic. 

Mineral extraction creates huge open pits, leach fields and tailings piles. They also create wide roads in wild places where employees are bused in and the ore trucked out.

These projects are extremely destructive for wild horses and the land they occupy. In most cases wild horse advocacy is unaware that a mine went in,  a huge habitat loss and vehicular collision record resulted, until a massive removal of wild horses is scheduled. (below USGS map of mining in the West)

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Mining in the West

 

Our litigation has changed policy 

 
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“Changing the reality of the wild horse must begin with the reality the wild horse lives.”

Laura Leigh, WHE Founder  |  April 2011

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Our Work; Abridged

 
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click here to learn about our groundbreaking work

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All of our work must begin with first hand documentation and intensive research. Your support has helped us lay a strong foundation to build upon. Adapting to the rapidly changing environment, both physical and politically, is only possible with your help. Adaptability is key to fighting for survival in our wild places, for our wild things.