The Red Desert Complex Wild Horse Roundup Continues Despite the Winds
October 14, 2020Only 90 Wild Horses Released Back into the Red Desert Complex During the Largest Removal in WY History
October 18, 2020The Devastation of the Red Desert Complex Wild Horse Roundup Continues
On day 5 we had a day off due to wind – I of course spent it with the horses, and saw a rainboy behind a family that I knew. I hoped it would be a sign.
There is another beautiful sunrise as I wait for the helicopters to chase the horses into the trap 1 mile away in the Red Desert Complex Roundup in Wyoming. We are at a location about a mile from the trap site. The winds are calm and it is 21 degrees this morning.
The helicopters were gone for a long time leading me to think they had to go quite a way to get a large group of horses that just came in in the Red Desert Complex Roundup in Wyoming day 5. We are still at the trap site in Stewart Creek. I was able to make out some colors because there is a high overcast of clouds – we have been shooting into the sun so it has been hard to see little more than silhouettes. No one went through the fence but there was lots of rearing and thrashing in the too small pens as they were pushing them in, and now loading them in trailers before taking them to temporary holding. Oh one horse escaped somehow – he disappeared over a ridge.
The wind is picking up and it feels even colder at the Red Desert Roundup this morning. One small family was just driven into the trap – on the way the stallion looked like he was going to defy the helicopter, he looked more determined than afraid, but he and his family were finally driven in. We are not sure how much longer today – it depends on if the winds get much worse.
Just saw three different wild horse families brought in separately over the last hour. Then a lone stallion brought in by himself – you could see his reluctance slowing to almost a stop outside the run up to the trap. But the helicopter won as it usually does. Much of the time after they come into the trap there is a huge amount of dust so you cannot see anything but sometimes there is rearing. They are loaded onto the stock trailers with usually no time to settle. Imagine if you were a wild horse running in fear of a helicopter being forced into a trailer by humans waving flags – it is all terrifying. At the best of times domestic horses can be afraid of getting into trailers.
I am posting tonight since in the morning I most likely will have no reception. I am in WY attending the Red Desert Complex Roundup, the largest roundup in recent history with 2400 wild horses to be removed from 5 Herd Management areas on over 700,000 acres. Today was Day 5 in Stewart Creek. They finished Stewart Creek today, having removed 78 horses today, bringing the total so far for Stewart Creek to 349. The BLM had estimated that there were 511 horses there but it became very obvious as they were bringing horses in the last couple of days that there was nowhere near this number. The original plan was to return 150 horses, 75 stallions and 75 mares treated with PZP – 22 birth control but I was told if they think there are still horses out there they may release less than that.
No injuries and no deaths so far at this roundup which is a very very good thing. I hope this continues.
So tomorrow they are rounding up in a new area – the “out of area” horses. There are 5 Herd Management Areas that surround a Herd Area that is no longer managed for wild horses – Arapahoe Creek that the BLM calls “the donut hole” – they do not even refer to it by its name. They plan to take every single horse from this area. It makes absolutely no sense to have a huge area in the middle not managed for horses when the whole justification behind having the AML for two of the HMAs be so low – 65 horses for Crooks Mountain, 60 for Lost Creek and 60 for Antelope Hills, far below the minimum number needed for genetic diversity (150 adults) is that the horses move between the Herd Management Areas.
This is the viewing area we were at In Arapahoe Creek, a Herd Area no longer managed for wild horses for the roundup on Day 6 in the Red Desert Complex in Wyoming. We could not see the trap at all. We were about a mile away and could see the jute sides leading up to the trap and we could see the helicopters driving the horses toward the trap. Initially there was a small family then a huge group of about 55. Them we had a family of 6 black horses run right by our vehicles and past the trap area.
Then we had several more groups come in, most of the wild horses that I know and love in this area. Unofficial estimate is about 128 horses were captured before the wind came up.
We are now waiting to hear if they will go into Stewart Creek yet again or if only 30 horses are left there, in which case they would subtract 30 from the 150 to be released back into the area. If there are more than 30 found by the pilots there will be another day in Stewart Creek. I am waiting for the 2:30 meeting to go see the horses, dreading to see those familiar faces behind panels and soon to be shipped to the BLM facility at Canon City.
We watched 24 stallions get released back into Stewart Creek with a ranger truck blocking our view and photos. Now only 90 wild horses instead of 150 will be released back into Stewart Creek because the helicopter pilot flew over and said there were 59 horses left.
Just finished visiting the 128 wild horses that were rounded up today No injuries, one horse euthanized a mare because of a badly twisted leg. Because these horses live in a Herd Area, Arapahoe Creek that is not managed for wild horses. So none of them will be returned to their home.
We were told this morning that tomorrow we would get to observe the roundup in the same area in the morning them see the rest of the 45 mares treated with PZP-22 and the 21 stallions released in the afternoon.
As we were touring the corrals we were told we could do one or the other in the morning, because of lack of space, even though they are shipping 100 horses first thing to Canon City. I made my disagreement known but they were adamant. This is not right. Such an easy thing, to let people photograph the very tiny amount of the 2400 horses to be rounded up being released. Such a happy thing. But no. I will be observing the helicopter driving the horses in in the morning, yes I made my choice because that is more important.
Leaving the area, I pass a wonderful small family I had seen once before, they were in LOst Creek and spending time with them hing wild horses I helped ease the pain of watching wild horses I care deeply about lose their freedom forever.
Related Posts:
18 Comments
Is it possible that if we get a new president and he is in favor of keeping all horses wild, that the ones taken to Colorado could possibly be brought back and released?? Any hope for the ones living in life term horse prison?? (If new president changes things?). I want to feel like their is still hope for them.
Anything is possible.
Carol thank you so much for being there to document this Holocaust So devastating. Do you know if that small group of blacks were the ones that escaped capture from one of the earlier roundups Laura Leigh documented There were 2 foals and one had white at back pastern areas like his dad.
Yes I sure hope and pray these horses weil be restored to their rightful natural and legal homes and that this criminal operation of eliminating them therefrom can be ended.
this is uncalled for the cattle men need to stop over grazing their cattle and leave the wild horse alone they belong on public land not the cattle the blm is suppose to be managing the land for the wild horses and natural habitat not for the cattle ranchers i say we hold a cattle round up after all the cattle are roaming free and they are not wild
[…] by Carol Walker as published on Wild Hoofbeats […]
Thank you for all that you do, Carol. Please, stay safe!!
This is complete devastation of the natural gene pools of the American wild horses….each area has distinct traits…this is eradication of some of these types. A sad day in America!
Thank you Carol for all that you do! Stay safe out there! My heart is breaking for these beautiful souls..
Need to get state representatives on board. If you talk to them or write them, you will find that most believe everything the BLM tells them. Start there. Email, write and call them all, including the president…but it starts on a local level.
If you view the people listed in the commitees that regulate what are decided about the wild horses, you will see that most of the representatives are from states and areas that have no knowledge of what a wild horse is, so why are they allowed to decide the fate of OUR wild horses?
The helicopter roundup of these magnificent naturally living horses is shameless and immoral. It is a crying injustice and extremely cruel. And all this to perpetrate the smug livestock monopoly as well as oil and gas monopoly of our public lands and resources! Such a disgrace to America.
These people need to be looking for another job! Fire them!
There is no real reason for removing these wild horses it is a disgrace. Shame on all of you that participate in these cruel roundups.
Removing these innocent horses from their home from their herd members is not the American way. Sadly it is the NLM’s way.
You should be ashamed. Born without a heart!
These people need to be looking for another job! Fire them!
There is no real reason for removing these wild horses it is a disgrace. Shame on all of you that participate in these cruel roundups.
Removing these innocent horses from their home from their herd members is not the American way. Sadly it is the BLM’s way.
You should be ashamed. Born without a heart!
It is horrific what they put these beautiful wild horses through, who are we to take away their freedom, they have been living this way for hundreds of years ,they are not doing any harm to anyone .We humans have a lot to answer too for cruelty towards all animals ,your country needs a president with a heart and someone who will listen .
I’m from New Hampshire and I follow you and your mission. I cry every time I read your mission and your pictures . My love of horses Malle follow you and your work . If there is anything I can do to help in yowork
Let me know. I can address our politicians
This is so cruel.
Department of WILDLIFE should be management . They just made a EMERGENCY WATER HAUL by HELICOPTER to save the wildlife throughout NEVADA to the 1600 installed water “GUZZLERS”
Why do they have BLM controlling the WILD HORSES and NOT the Dept of WILDLIFE?
The Bureau of Land Management was designated to manage our wild horses back in 1971 when the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act was passed and unfortunately they were set up by livestock ranchers.