News Archive

Mustangs Sent Over the Edge?

Friday, August 6th, 2010

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Plenty of Water at Nevada Roundup – And Dead Horses Too!

August 4, 2010
By Steven Long, Photos by Katie Fite and Cattoor Livestock Roundups

HOUSTON, (Horseback) – A federal helicopter chase contractor has acknowledged there was plenty of water in an Elko County, Nevada wild horse area, contradicting what government lawyers told a U.S. District Judge last month.

She said that many of the horses in a large herd management area just didn’t know it was there and were kept in pastures far away.

In an exclusive interview with Horseback Magazine, Sue Cattoor of Cattoor Livestock Roundups, Inc. said the Owyhee River, the border of their most recent wild horse stampede dubbed the “Tuscarora Gather,” has enough water for vacationers to camp and fish, plus multiple trails leading down to water’s edge giving access to thirsty animals including horses.

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A disturbing photo of a dead Palomino Wild Horse surfaced on the Internet and in news reports last week. The picture, taken by Western Watershed Project Biodiversity Director Katie Fite shows the horse lying in rocks below a cliff. Wild horse activists say the photo demonstrates the cruelty of a government program wasting millions of dollars that is out of control. Many of them believe that a Cattoor helicopter drove the horse over a cliff.

That is not true.

But a firestorm of outrage has swept across the desert sands of Nevada and the nation at what many believe is a government agency that has turned rogue. U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu, (D) La has proposed that her colleagues consider removing the Wild Horse and Burro Program from federal Bureau of Land Management control.

And fifty-four members of Congress have petitioned Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to end the capture of wild horses on land controlled by the BLM. They have asked the National Academy of Science to investigate the agency’s Wild Horse and Burro Program. More than 150 horses and foals died in the wake of a mid-winter roundup in Nevada’s Calico Mountains. The congressmen say that 21 horses have died at BLM’s hand thus far during and after the Tuscarora stampedes.

Reno federal Judge Larry Hicks imposed a temporary injunction that had stopped the agency from capturing horses after one day in which 12 horses died after being run eight miles in more than 100 degree July Nevada desert heat. He lifted the temporary restraining order after being told by government lawyers an emergency existed because horses needed to be captured since they faced the prospect of dying of thirst because there was no water in the desert.

In fact, the BLM trucked water into the area rather than driving them, as they are clearly capable of doing, to a freely flowing river with abundant water. But she says the bulk of the horses involved in the roundup were in three pastures away from the river.

Cattoor acknowledged that the Owyhee River has running water, and during the roundup an Idaho group was camping on its banks – and even fishing.

“They were just a little ways up from where the horses trail down to the river. It‘s almost like a miniature Grand Canyon. This particular spot of where the trail goes down in the canyon is where the horses go to water,” Cattoor said.

Cattoor also said that there are other trails leading to the river that would have been available to the horses, but “the horses aren’t using those trails. They are only using this one. A lot of those horses didn’t know that trail was there because a lot of the horses we captured in this HMA were young horses.”

Typically, foals follow their mothers to water, so in all likelihood, the young horses whose habitat is near the river had been exposed to the abundant water in the waterway and the riparian area on either side, despite Cattoor’s comments to the contrary.

But some horses came to the river for the first time, she acknowledges. How did these lost horses get there? Were they driven there by a Cattoor helicopter, activists are certain to ask.

“After they were down in there, they did not know how to come out,” Cattoor said.

A wide trail leads down a gently sloping river bank to the river shown in a photograph on the Cattoor website http://www.wildhorseroundups.com. Sue Cattoor says the photo is deceptive and the trail is very steep.

Cattoor says that there has been ample water in recent years to sustain horses in the area.

“I find it odd that with all the months of planning by the BLM that occurs before a round-up there was no mention of lack of water for the horses in any of their documentation and then after the lawsuit was filed, it suddenly became an emergency,” said Vicki Tobin, co-founder of the Chicago based Equine Welfare Alliance.

“The BLM has authority to round-up horses in an emergency situation so if the horses were in such dire straits, they should have dealt with the situation long before the lawsuit was filed.”

Like many in the West steeped in a ranching tradition, Sue Cattoor believes the wild horse are livestock, not wild animals. That tradition views livestock as a commodity, nothing more. Something to be bought and sold. Ranchers have a very pronounced vision of how animals should be viewed, and Cattoor is no different.

“If they are wildlife, then why don’t they issue a license for them to be hunted?” she asks.

Cattoor said campers along the river mentioned that the wild horses were in the area when they first got there, however, there were no campers around during recent visits by others to confirm what the federal contractor says.

Visitors say they found evidence that there were traps set up along the river bottom. Cattoor counters that what they believe were the remnants of BLM pens were actually the abandoned campsites of the Idaho campers who had traveled to fish the river.

There are no witnesses to refute the allegation that horses could have been driven by a roaring helicopter into the area whose rugged features include jagged rocks and towering river banks. The horses also could have injured themselves on the sharp outcrops trying to escape something they feared and had never seen before.

“They climbed up on that ledge looking for a way out and didn‘t know how to get back out of it,” Cattoor said.

In a lengthy note on the company website Sue Cattoor explains her firm’s position in minute detail. The note is also accompanied by a photo of a broad well traveled trail leading to a flowing river filled with plenty of water. Another photo of the river shows steep cliffs. Cattoor denied Horseback Magazine permission to use the photos.

Sue Cattoor acknowledges the horses were injured trying to negotiate the rough terrain.

“They were moving around in those rocks, trying to go up and down to survive and would have gotten the injury in the rocks. Those horses were trying to find a way down”

She said the pocket of possible stragglers from the helicopter chase were discovered after the helicopter pilot and her husband flew over to speak with the campers they had seen along the river.

“When they flew over to talk to these campers, they discovered these horses on the opposite side of the river from where the trail was. They herded those horses that were up there back down to the river because those horses had ledged up there and they did not know how to get back down.”

But after the herd was driven down river, the two severely injured horses remained, Cattoor said. One was the Palomino horse later photographed dead by Fite.

The photo of the still living but injured Palomino horse was taken from the Cattoor helicopter and the wound appears to be to the bone. The photo was supplied to Horseback Magazine by Sue Cattoor.

Cattoor says the horse had vision problems and was old.

“There were two horses. One, the horses that she (Fite) took the picture of, and a foal that was caught in the crevasse of the rocks with broken legs that they had to go back and euthanize,” Cattoor said.

Former Horseback Magazine veterinary columnist Dr. Angela Chenault viewed the blown up photo and said the injury was possibly survivable, but “its not likely to have a good outcome on a feral horse. Aftercare is critical and even stalling this horse will be a problem mentally.”

The horse found by Fite was not driven over the cliff to its death by Dave Cattoor, it was shot by him from the helicopter with a high powered rifle.

“It happens on occasion because when we are out gathering horses, if we see something that has a pre-existing injury or if something is extremely old and needs to be put down, they will euthanize it in the field,” Cattoor said.

Dr. Chenault said the injury was not fresh.

“It’s difficult to say how old by the picture but I would say it is over 24 hours by the way the muscles look,” she said.

Activists will likely continue to believe the worst of the Cattoors and their company. And Sue Cattoor will continue to attempt to spin the image of a company that is compassionately capturing horses, even if some die in the process.

The helicopter contractor said that despite the judge’s ruling that observers be allowed to view the roundups, her company will not allow observers on horseback despite a long standing Horseback Magazine request to the BLM to do so.

“If they are on horseback they are going to interfere with the operation,” she said. “We never allow our wranglers to be on horseback when the helicopter is driving horses to the trap. We can’t have somebody there that might turn the horses back and cause problems.”

Cattoor said she would have no objection to observers who hiked in to the roundup area if they were accompanied by a BLM public relations person. In past “gathers” armed guards have prevented observers and the press from freely walking into the roundup area.

Despite encouragement from Cattoor for Horseback to observe a roundup, BLM has barred press and public in the trap area because recent ones have been located on private property. The agency claims landowners object to media and other observers on their land. However, when the BLM leases property for a site, it falls under federal control much like a post office building does when it is leased by the federal General Services Administration for public use. The landowner relinquishes control of his property to the control of the federal government.

Cattoor Livestock Roundups will not allow the media to fly as passengers in their helicopter citing prohibitions from their insurance company.

“I have no problem with the press coming out and watching if they want to, as long as they are absolutely not interfering with the gather and causing stress for the horses,” she said.

Cattoor also was critical during the interview of media reports of the numbers of horses which died “because of helicopter gathers.”

On the Calico roundup seven horses died in the field out of a total of more than 150 horses and unborn foals who met their deaths in captivity, including two foals who shed their hooves after being stampeded over rocky terrain in the dead of winter by a roaring helicopter.

“In this roundup we didn’t lose any on the actual HMA (herd management area). Others died for lack of water or too much water, or were destroyed for humane reasons,” Cattoor said.

“They are trying to stop roundups saying the helicopter gathers are cruel and inhumane and that’s not a fact,” she said. “The losses from Calico was because those horses were in very bad shape when they were captured because there wasn’t enough food out there.”

Photographs of the captured Calico horses by naturalist Craig Downer and wild horse litigant Laura Leigh show fat healthy horses even in the BLM hospital area.

And 54 members of Congress clearly want to knock Sue Cattoor and her company out of a job, temporarily at least.

And litigation continues in the courts to stop what the BLM benignly calls “gathers.”

SOURCE

Rahall and 53 Other House Members Seek to Halt BLM Gathers

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

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Congressmen Seek to Halt BLM Gathers

by: Pat Raia
August 04 2010, Article # 16772

A bipartisan group of congressmen have asked Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar to halt controversial gather operations in Nevada and postpone all pending wild horse gathers until an independent study of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) mustang management operations takes place. The BLM is a division within the Department of Interior, and the Free Roaming Wild Horse and Burro Act of 1971 places mustang and burro management under BLM jurisdiction.

In a July 30 letter U.S. Representative Nick Rahall (D-WV), chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, and 53 other House members called on Salazar specifically to stop the mustang gather from the Tuscarora Complex in Elko County, Nev., during which 17 horses died due to dehydration or roundup-related injuries.

In the letter the Congressmen labeled the BLM’s mustang management policies as “deeply flawed” and requested a halt to all gathers “until the agency demonstrates that it has addressed the failings of the current program and can ensure the safety and well-being of the animals you are charged with protecting.”

The letter also called for an independent study of the BLM’s Wild Horse and Burro program by the National Academy of Sciences, a nonprofit group that advises government agencies on scientific issues. The study would determine the most accurate, science-based methods for estimating wild horse and burro populations and recommend practical, effective non-lethal, publicly acceptable management alternatives to current BLM policies.

BLM spokesman Tom Gorey said, “We are committed to the protection and conservation of wild horses and the lands on which they roam. We are reviewing the letter.”

Jerry Finch, president and founder of Habitat for Horses, said wild horse advocates have long called for congressional attention to mustang management issues. “This positive action has been a long time coming,” he said. “Since the appointment of Department of Interior Secretary Ken Salazar the BLM has been hell bent on zeroing out standing herds and reducing remaining ones to unsustainable numbers. There is just no logic or science to it.”

SOURCE

You Don’t Have to Be an Animal Lover to Be a Good American- Get on Board the Pony Express by September 1st!

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

Dear Friends, Supporters, and Future Supporters,

We have heard you voice your complaints about the roundups.

We have listened to you share so many of your personal stories about your own adopted mustangs.

We have all sent thousands of letters via fax, email, and USPS to our Government officials. Even to the point of their phone lines being unplugged and emails shut down due to the high volume of wild horse supporters on this issue.

We are doing all of these things daily, but there still has been NO change.

It’s time for the PONY EXPRESS!!!

I will personally hand-deliver each and every letter that you email, via the Pony Express (one of our beautiful mustangs), to Washington DC.

I set a goal of 20,000 individual letters to take with me.

Everyone is invited to get onboard with us! If you are a proud American, International supporter, animal activist, or just anyone who would like to tell President Obama, Secretary Salazar, and Bob Abbey (BLM) that we aren’t going to sit by waiting until these roundups are over are encouraged to write. This is a very important issue to hundreds of thousands of people that have pleaded with our government to stop gathering our wild horses.  This way, they cannot unplug their phones, make their website impossible to send a comment to, or delete emails. These are GOING to get to Washington. I promise you that!

For the millions of people who are unaware of the roundup process by our own government, here it is: The Bureau of Land Management, a branch of the Department of the Interior, has scheduled the removal of America’s wild horses and are attempting to change the grazing rights to be mainly cattle on the BLM managed land, which leave our American wild horses homeless. 100 years ago there were 2 million horses. Now, because of these roundups, there are maybe 20,000-30,000 left. The BLM contracts low-flying helicopters to taunt and scare the mustangs, separating them from their families, and eventually coerced into tiny pens. The mustangs are then taken off to holding facilities where they no longer have room to roam anymore. They will be moved to a short-term holding facility for up to three years if not adopted out or sold to a buyer that intends on using the wild horses for slaughter.

There are over 11,000 in just short-term holding currently. The pens are very confining and the horses are literally butt to butt, which makes exercise, eating, and drinking very difficult. Taxpayers are currently spending nearly $40 million per year on these roundups and the holding pens. If current removal and holding practices continue, annual funding for the total wild horse and burro program would rise to approximately $85 million by 2012, and an estimated additional 20,000 horses in holding pens.

Madeleine Pickens (Founder of Saving America’s Mustangs) has an alternative that will cut these costs at a tremendous savings to Americans by creating an eco-sanctuary for the wild horses. She is buying the land and developing the sanctuary with her own funds. She will start with the horses currently in short-term holding. This will be a place where Americans and their families can come see their horses roaming free as they are naturally used to. They can stay (in tee pees or lodges) on the land; learn about Native American culture and the wild horse centuries ago. It will be an experience that will be cherished long after the visitors leave.slaughter2round up pic

 

Deadline for letters: September 1, 2010

This gives us less than ONE MONTH to get 20,000 letters in-hand to bring to our Nation’s Capital. We just want you to stand up for your American right- to keep your wild horses, wild. We have made this even simpler, all you have to do is click the blue button below, sign your name to the pre-written letter and click “submit.” Your letter will be sent to the U.S. government, as well as a copy directly to our Saving America’s Mustangs office. We will printout the letters, put them in envelopes, and hand-deliver to Washington. Every letter counts! This task takes seconds and will potentially save thousands of wild horses that belong to the American people.

You can find all of this information on our website. Please forward this to all of your contacts so that we can make this Pony Express as huge as HUMANLY possible. (Or HUMANELY possible on behalf of our majestic, wild horses)

Or you can mail your letters to:

Madeleine’s Pony Express

2683 Via De La Valle, G 313

Del Mar, CA 92014

Can we do this? Will you do this?

Very Sincerely,

Madeleine Pickens

Please Click the button below to Get on Board the Pony Express!!!

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Follow Madeleine on Twitter: http://twitter.com/mpickens
Become Madeleine Pickens’ Friend on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/madeleine.pickens
Visit her websites for up to the minute information: www.savingamericasmustangs.org or www.madeleinepickens.com

Nevada Magazine- Madeleine Pickens- Race to Save the Mustangs

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Madeleine Pickens

Champion Thoroughbred Owner is Caught Up in the Race to Save America’s Wild Mustangs.

By REBECCA PONTON | Nevada Magazine July/August 2010

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Photo: Michael Partenio
It all began with a John Wayne movie.
While she herself has an exotic background—born in Kirkuk, Iraq to a British father and a Lebanese mother, Madeleine Pickens grew up in various locales around the world—it was America’s Wild West heritage that captured her imagination. After going to the then-British Bahamas in 1966, she arrived in the United States in 1969 on a green card, later becoming an American citizen and eventually a resident of Dallas.
When asked what attracted her to America, she is effusive. “Oh, gosh! Watching all the American movies—John Wayne and cowboys—oh, it was so exciting! I mean, what a sexy history you guys have—and I’m part of it now!” she says gleefully.
“Remember the show Bonanza [and] the Ponderosa?” she continues, caught up in the nostalgia. “I used to watch that show, and I hated it when it came to an end, and then you had to wait until the next week. I absolutely loved it. I used to envy [actress] Linda Evans, having all those brothers, living that life on the range. It was so, so beautiful. I was certainly going to run off with John Wayne; there was no question. All that was so dreamy,” she says, laughing at the memory.

Wild, Wild Horses
It’s that romanticism, coupled with a sense of moral responsibility, which has led Pickens where she is today. Along with her husband, T. Boone Pickens, the legendary oilman who has embraced alternative energy, she is co-founder of the nonprofit Saving America’s Mustangs (savingamericasmustangs.org), the goal of which is to establish a permanent home for wild horses and burros.
Pickens’ love affair with animals began early. “We had Labradors growing up. My father loved dogs. He used to go hunting, much to my [dismay]. Every Friday night, the guns would come out, and the dogs would get so excited, and I couldn’t understand why they weren’t excited to play with me anymore. They knew their big weekend was here.”
Pickens went on to become a successful racehorse owner and breeder, but it is America’s wild mustangs that have become her focus. “I came here, and I never saw the wild animals, and I didn’t know much about [the situation],” she says, referring to the more than 30,000 wild horses and burros that are being kept in short- and long-term holding areas, many of them for years and in less-than-ideal conditions.
“I was devastated when I found out, but also delighted that I had the opportunity to jump in and fix it and then find a way to bring pleasure to the American public,” says Pickens, who envisions the creation of a horse eco-sanctuary as an opportunity to recapture the Wild West on a grand scale—“like a Yellowstone.”
“People can come [and] bring their families…to a living museum where they can see these horses roam, have documentaries, have campgrounds where the kids can come. [School children] all go to Washington at some point in their lives [to see] the monuments. They can go to Nevada [where half of the country’s wild horses are found] and visit Mustang Monument and see all of this and be educated—classes and campfires and teachers. I’m very, very excited about it all. I’ve had a lot of interest from all different [sectors] of the United States, which shows that people love this [idea].”

Grassroots Campaign
To see her dream become reality, Pickens has had to deal with government bureaucracy and has learned the wheels of change turn very slowly, which she attributes to something she jokingly refers to as the “NIH theory”—Not Invented Here.
“When you bring something new to the table—and for 40 years they’ve been doing it one way—it’s difficult for people to switch gears. I think sometimes you can be too close to an issue, and it’s tougher to see how you can fix things,” she says, referring to the Bureau of Land Management, which is currently responsible for overseeing the welfare of wild horses and burros.
To help create awareness of her plan, which involves persuading legislators to pass a law converting the 1 million acres of land necessary to accommodate the animals from cattle-grazing to horse-grazing, Pickens’ Saving America’s Mustangs foundation has staged several pregame and halftime tributes held at college football games. The foundation also has created a 25-member advisory board, which includes a number of
well-known Texans. Among them are T. Boone Pickens, Chairman June Jones, Jerry Jones, Roger Staubach, Troy Aikman, Mark Cuban, and others.
The key difference in her plan, Pickens stresses, is the stipend paid by the government will not go into private hands (as it does now); it will stay with the foundation. She emphasizes the foundation cannot use the money for anything other than taking care of the land, so that the horses are provided for.
During the course of her campaign, she has discovered the power of the grassroots movement. At the time of this writing (late 2009), supporters of Pickens’ vision had submitted nearly 12,000 signatures to Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and the BLM. She urges those who are interested to go to her website (madeleinepickens.com), where they can sign up for alerts. “The wonderful thing about the Internet is that you [can] educate and inform the public about issues they didn’t know existed,” she says. “Let’s face it, I didn’t know about these issues [before].”

‘Outrageous History’
Pickens recalls the first time, from the view of a helicopter, that she saw horses running wild. “It was just one of those life-changing days where you say, ‘This is what I want to do. This is what I want to bring back and share with people.’ We can’t let these animals be gathered and thrown into a world of sadness and horror and slaughter. That’s got to end. It’s too beautiful a part of life.”
Not only does Pickens want to provide a sanctuary for the mustangs, but she would like to see them accorded the same respect as the bald eagle. Curious about the bald eagle’s status, she recently had the opportunity to see hundreds of them on Stuart Island in Canada and only then did she realize their beauty and majesty. “It was great,” she says, “but it certainly didn’t impress me as much as if I saw thousands of wild mustangs thundering by, their manes flowing in the wind. How can you not think of them [as a national symbol]?”
“I think it’s a very sexy heritage,” Pickens continues. “In [this] great country, that’s how the West was formed—people came out on wagon trains. When I’m flying across the country and traveling and looking at some of the land those people had to cross, you say, ‘How on earth did they do it?’ There were Indians, there were cowboys; I find the whole thing beautiful. What an outrageous history this country has! It’s beautiful, so I think it’s a shame we’ve forgotten our history.”
When asked if she would like saving the wild horses to be her legacy, Pickens replies, “It’s part of my life. Some people care very much about a legacy. I only care that I took care of my footprint. I’m sure that I’ll launch some other projects because I actually enjoy fixing things.”
Pickens says she found her John Wayne in husband Boone. Just don’t expect them to ride off into the sunset anytime soon. “We have a moral responsibility in life. Everybody has a footprint. Not just a carbon footprint, but the footprint of life,” Pickens says with conviction. “I feel I’ve got so much more to do.”

CONTACT
Saving America’s Mustangs
www.savingamericasmustangs.org

SOURCE

A Special Tribute to 1st Lt. Nathan M. Krissoff, USMC

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Dr. Bill and Christine Krissoff, parents of Nathan, are local residents of Rancho Santa Fe and Del Mar Country Club salutes them. We are proud to call them our neighbors.

A Slick in the Night (Truth About the Mustangs)

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

July 29, 2010

A Slick In The Night

by Valerie James-Patton

We keep hearing the upsetting stories from our wild horse advocates living in Nevada near the BLM wild horse holding facilities about wild horses being hauled in the middle of the night and disappearing. We hear it often.

We’ve been told by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), that’s to prevent the horses from getting overheated during the high temperatures in the hot summer months, but that doesn’t fly when we hear of it happening during the cold winter months.

When numbers from BLM reports don’t add up, and large numbers of horses are missing from the charts, all those stories of night-time hauls come to mind.

So does the story from a BLM informant, who anonymously gave his testimony to a special agent from the Department of Justice back in 1994, and was exposed in the 1997 PEER Review Report: Horses to Slaughter – Anatomy of A Cover-Up.

Sure, it’s an old document from the past, telling how BLM escaped a grand jury trial over BLM’s decades long horse theft program, which was concluded to be so vast and wide spread throughout the BLM Wild Horse and Burro program that no one could be held accountable, but has anything changed? Or has BLM just gotten better at covering the trail of disappearing wild horses?

In a condensed version from 3 pages of testimony from the PEER report by a BLM informant in the horse theft program, he explains that, 50 head out of 65 horses would be reported at a location, the excess 15 horses would be transported to satellite ranches which are actually holding pens. The ranch receives money to hold the horses for a certain time until they’re picked up again. They may be hot-branded with different brands, or transported as “slicks”, meaning they have no brand at all. Most of them over a time period will go to the killers. Sometimes the horses are transported during working hours, but “most of the time it’s been at night, after the count’s been jimmied around. You strictly drive down to a certain location, open a gate and dump those horses in with a bunch of other horses. The BLM guy goes home around 4:30 and guys would load up the stolen horses, take them to satellite ranches and be back by the next morning for business as usual.”

Double-booking or black-booking is when more than one horse is branded with the same brand, and one set of legitimate paperwork is filled out to go with one horse, and depending on how many horses are wearing that same brand, a fake set of paperwork is made for them. “They are sold as legitimate horses, and sold within a week to sale barns or… The odds of you ever being checked are 100 to 1, and I’ve never seen a title on a wild horse.”

When asked if this was a pretty good organization, the informant replied that it’s very well set up, and “nobody that participates in it isn’t well known, and it can’t be done without the BLM guy standing right there.”

He further explained that “You can’t enforce a common practice that’s been going on for years and years. You can’t stop everybody that’s in it. You catch one guy, so there’s 50 more out there doing the same thing.”

The informant justified and summed up the operation by saying, “It’s not actually stealing in our way of looking at it. It’s just a way of life, you know. It’s been a common practice for numbers and numbers of years. There’s never been any paperwork ever required. If we wanted to trade horses, move horses, you know, it’s just a way of life. You’ve got ranchers out there that are paying the permit fees on grazing, and then they have a bunch of wild horses move in, they’re losing money because they’re paying for that grass. These wild horses come in and are eating up the grass, so sure they’re pissed off. It’s our job to disburse those horses, you know, so we do our best to get rid of as many as we can. I don’t really consider it stealing”.

But we do. And we currently have a large number of horses missing.

Flash forward to June/July 2010:

As we explained in our EWA press release, (7-27-2010), it appears we have at least 2,282 horses missing from the BLM wild horse holding facilities, and no rocket science is needed to add and subtract the numbers in the BLM population facility reports and compare those to horses removed from the range along with the reported deaths, adoptions and sales of the wild horses.

Even though there are questions on BLM’s math skills, it’s important to remember we’re not just questioning calculations on paper, but we’re questioning the lives of horses that have disappeared. There’s a huge problem taking place in BLM’s wild horse facilities and the horses removed from the range than just what paper work reveals, and much more than what BLM is willing to tell.

One can only wonder if they became “slicks” quietly hauled away in the night.

Even a rocket scientist adding the numbers up would not be able to give us an answer to that question.

Contact:

Valerie James-Patton
Vice President, Equine Welfare Alliance
EWA Research Subject Matter Expert (SME)
530.474.1128

valerie_jamespatton@yahoo.com
http://www.equinewelfarealliance.org/

Equine Welfare Alliance is an umbrella organization representing over 115 organizations and hundreds of individuals across the United States and several countries worldwide.
SOURCE

Senator Landrieu- A Champion for Our Wild Horses

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

 

Thank you so much to Senator Mary Landrieu for writing this very informed and inspirational call to action for our beautiful wild horses. She is truly a leader in this cause and hopefully will be our champion in Congress for legislation and the suspension of these roundups!!

-Saving America’s Mustangs Foundation

senator_mary_landrieu_official_photo_portrait

Wild horses symbolize US freedom

By Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) - 07/28/10

 

The image of hundreds of wild horses freely roaming the open terrain in the American West is reminiscent of times past and our country’s trailblazing heritage. However, on July 10, the 200 wild horses galloping frantically across a breathtaking Nevada plain, with dust swirling around their sweaty bodies, were running in fear. With dry summer heat reaching 95 degrees, these horses were forced to run for miles over rough volcanic rock in an attempt to escape the government’s low-flying helicopter in pursuit. It is foaling season and many of the mares and foals were weak from their recent pregnancy or from giving birth.               

 

The offending helicopter was part of the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) effort to round-up and relocate 1,200 of our nation’s wild mustangs from this area. It is just one of dozens of planned roundups to permanently remove and relocate thousands of our wild horses.

The BLM states that the wild horse population is expanding rapidly, and it needs to relocate these animals to prevent the exhaustion of the region’s resources. The BLM has been stating this for more than a decade now, but has yet to implement a sound management plan.  In 1971, when the National Wild Horse and Burro Program was created, there were 54 million acres for wild horse and burros. Now, only 27 acres remain. And in every year since the BLM was entrusted with this program, populations have exceeded the agency’s appropriate management level by thousands of animals, reaching over 60,000 at one point. Enough is enough. It is time to find a more effective management plan for these horses that does not result in the careless death of so many.           

 

As a result of the July 10 and July 11 roundups, 13 mustangs died.  Although horse advocates fought for a suspension of the roundups, their efforts were overruled and they continued the next weekend. The death toll now stands at 17.  

The bloody tale of the recent roundups in Nevada is not unique. Last winter, during the 40-day BLM Calico Hills Roundup, the government captured 1,800 horses and about 80 died, some during the roundup and others at the holding facilities. Additionally, dozens of pregnant mares suffered miscarriages.           

A report issued in April 2010 by the American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign found 43 percent of the deaths that resulted from the winter Calico roundup were due to diet and metabolic failure that was brought on by stress and trauma. 

Currently, more than 32,000 horses have already been removed from the ranges and are being forced into overcrowded and inhumane holding facilities. Not only is this not a safe or desirable solution for the animals, but also it is costing the American taxpayers more than $30 million a year. There are an estimated 37,000 mustangs and burros that live in our Western states. We now have nearly that amount in custody, and the BLM plans to remove an additional 12,000 wild horses from the ranges at a cost of millions to the American taxpayer. 

The actions of the BLM are contrary to The Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971’s original intent to manage the wild horses and burros in their natural state and to protect them from capture and harassment. I have repeatedly called for an end to these roundups until a more humane and cost-effective solution has been put in place. The Obama administration should be ashamed that this is happening under its watch.   

Congress took an important step forward last year when the Interior Appropriations Bill, at my request, directed the BLM to develop a new comprehensive long-term plan for wild horse populations by September 30. I was joined by Congressmen Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.), Nick Rahall (D-W.Va.) and Ed Whitfield (R-Ky.) in writing to Director Bob Abbey of the BLM urging a moratorium on the roundups that have caused so many horses unnecessary pain and suffering. We are making long-overdue progress, but more must be done.            

The wild mustangs are living symbols of our country’s history and pioneering spirit. Anyone who has had the privilege of watching a wild herd graze freely and calmly understands what majestic animals these wild mustangs truly are. It is hard to fathom that hundreds of our wild horses have died at the hands of the federal agency entrusted to protect them. I will continue to urge the BLM to stop the inhumane roundups and work to find a better legislative solution.  Letting the death toll of America’s mustangs continue to rise is simply not an option.

Sen. Landrieu is the senior senator from Louisiana.

SOURCE

Madeleine on the Mark Larson Radio Show

Friday, July 30th, 2010

 I was a guest on the Mark Larson Radio Show  in San Diego, CA the morning of July 28th.

I discussed the upcoming Twin Peaks gather in CA in August, the past roundups, and why it’s important to save our American horses.

Here is the first hour when I was on. My interview starts at 40:00

1d74a554-cbd3-e788-7b7b-17f187098e1d.mp3

Get on Board Madeleine’s Pony Express- Click for Details

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Dear Friends, Supporters, and Future Supporters,

We have heard you voice your complaints about the roundups.

We have listened to you share so many of your personal stories about your own adopted mustangs.

We have all sent thousands of letters via fax, email, and mail to our Government. Even calling phone lines that have since been unplugged, because of the volume of calls.

We are doing all of these things daily, but there still has been NO change.

It’s time for the PONY EXPRESS!!!

I will personally hand deliver each and every letter that you write, via the Pony Express (one of our beautiful mustangs), to Washington DC. I am setting a goal of 20,000 individual letters to take with me. Americans, International supporters, animal activists, anyone who would like to tell President Obama, Secretary Salazar, and Bob Abbey that we aren’t going to sit by waiting until these roundups are over is encouraged to write. This is a very important issue to hundreds of thousands of people that have pleaded with our government to stop gathering our wild horses. This way they cannot unplug their phones, make their website impossible to send a comment to, or delete emails. These are GOING to get to Washington. I promise you that!

For the millions of people who are unaware of the roundup process, here it is: The Bureau of Land Management, a branch of the Department of the Interior, has scheduled the removal of America’s wild horses and are attempting to change the grazing rights to be cattle only on the BLM owned land, which leave our wild horses homeless. 100 years ago there were 2 million horses. Now, because of these roundups, there are only 30,000 left. They contract low-flying helicopters to taunt and scare the mustangs, separating them from their families, and eventually coerced into tiny pens. The mustangs are then taken off to holding facilities where they no longer have room to roam anymore. They will be moved to a short-term holding facility for up to three years if not adopted out or sold to a buyer that intends on using the wild horse for slaughter.

Deadline: September 1, 2010

This gives us ONE month to get 20,000 letters in hand to bring to our Nation’s Capital. You can find more information about the BLM and the roundups in the News and Events Section on this website. Please click the button below. By clicking that button, you will send your letter to our government, but also a copy directly to our Saving America’s Mustangs office; where we will print them, put them in envelopes, and hand-deliver to Washington. Every letter counts! Please forward this email to all of your contacts so that we can make this Pony Express as huge as HUMANLY possible. (Or HUMANELY possible on behalf of our majestic, wild horses)

Very Sincerely,

Madeleine Pickens

Please Click this button to Get on Board the Pony Express!!!

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Please Act Today: MAIL a Letter to the BLM by August 3rd! Click for Details

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Please Act Today! One Week to Send a Letter To
Help Create Change for Wild Horses & Burros

Obama Administration Asks For Public Comments on Reforming Wild Horse Program and Refuses To Accept Public Comments Via Email - Please Mail Your Letter Today!   Every Letter Counts!

 

Despite the Obama Administration’s claims that it wants to encourage greater public participation in government, this Administration is creating obstacles for Americans to submit comments on the Wild Horse & Burro program. The Department of Interior released its “Wild Horse & Burro Strategy Development Document” which outlines the Obama Administration’s direction for the program.

Instead of making it easier for Americans to submit comments, President Obama’s Interior Secretary has actually eliminated the public’s ability to submit comments via the traditional e-mail and fax methods – we are forced to submit comments in one of two ways: (1) U.S. postal service or (2) online with SPECIFIC directions below.  We have received numerous complaints that people using the online software have had their comments deleted and lost.

Therefore, we urge you to mail a letter today to the BLM. Also,  be sure to sign any local organizations you may represent. Please forward this to other likeminded individuals that would like to send a letter before the August 3rd deadline as well. The address to mail the letter is:

Wild Horse & Burro Strategy

BLM Washington Office

1849 C Street NW, Rm. 5665

Washington DC 20240

Public comments must be received No later than August 3, 2010 – so please be sure to print the letter, sign and mail it today! Don’t delay – please don’t let the Interior Department’s attempt to thwart public participation in this important comment period succeed.

What you can do if you would like to send the BLM a letter of your own:

 Here are a few points to make:

The BLM must place an immediate moratorium on removing horses from the range except in emergency situations (i.e. severe droughts and other natural catastrophes)

It’s time for the BLM to initiate an aggressive sterilization program using immunocontraception [link] to stabilize and manage wild horse herds in a humane, effective, cost-beneficial manner.

The BLM must honor its previous commitment to care for these animals and work with organizations and agencies to develop humane, sustainable programs for managing these animals on the range and in holding centers.

Viable populations of wild horses and burros should be allowed to roam free on our public lands, and if need be, managed using humane, long-term, cost-beneficial methods, such as immunocontraception.

How to submit your comments:

The BLM is only accepting comments via a form on its website. It will take a few steps to submit your comments, but it is essential that your voice be heard. Follow these steps:

1. Go to the planning document » Planning Document

2. Click on this text (in blue) near the top center of the page: “Click Here to Submit Comments.”

3. A new page will open.

Type your comments in the text box (you can ignore the Selected Content and Comment Title sections).
When you’re finished, click “Add Comment”
4. The page will appear again.

The text box will be blank, but the “Comments” section at the bottom will show the number “1” under “Comment id.”
Click the “Next” button on the bottom right.

5. Fill in your personal information and click “Next.”6. Review your submission, and click “Submit” at the bottom right. A “Submission Successful” page will appear.

You can also use this prewritten letter as a template. Just copy and paste the text below into a Word Document:

Wild Horse & Burro Strategy Document

BLM Washington Office

1849 C Street NW, Rm. 5665

Washington DC 20240

 July , 2010

 To whom it may concern:

 Following are my comments on the Department of Interior’s “Wild Horse & Burro Strategy Development Document.” As per the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM’s) announcement on June 14, 2010 in Denver, Colorado, these comments are being submitted via the BLM’s Washington office. The Denver meeting was touted as a means to open public dialogue on the BLM’s management of the Wild Horse and Burro Program, yet since that meeting there has been no response to the overwhelming public opposition to the Bureau’s actions. If the BLM is sincere in its desire to work with the public, a moratorium on roundups must be effectuated in order to develop a sustainable program that manages horses and burros on the range.

I am disappointed with the Obama Administration’s policy of pursuing the same ill-conceived Bush-Administration policies that remove wild horses from our public lands at an unprecedented pace. Despite Interior Secretary Ken Salazar’s admission that this policy is unsustainable, the Administration is in the process of removing 6,000 additional wild horses and burros before the end of October 2010. This Administration has conducted little to no management of wild horses and burros on the range and has consistently rounded up, removed and warehoused horses at the expense of taxpayers and wild horses. As a result, for the first time in history, there are more wild horses warehoused in government holding facilities than free on the range. Below are my comments on the Strategy Document.

TOPIC: Treasured Herds

                         Every herd is treasured; I oppose how the BLM is interpreting the term because it involves manipulation and micromanagement. Congress already determined that every herd is treasured.

 

TOPIC: Preserves

                        – I urge an immediate moratorium on roundups to prevent creating need for more preserves.

                        – Preserves must not replace on-the-range management and should only be used to phase out long- and short-term holding.

                        – I support using the authority the BLM always had to re-establish horses in zeroed-out HAs and HMAs.

                        – I support commitment to not killing horses deemed “excess” and “unadoptable.”

                        – Preserves should only be located in western states.

                        – Preserves must strive to maintain the social integrity of wild horse herds, allowing horses to live in more natural conditions instead of the current imposition of domestic conditions on horses who are still designated as “wild” under the law.

                        – Support private-public partnerships, but BLM must immediately pursue Soldier Meadows, Winecup Gamble, Madeleine Pickens and similar proposal now on the table to reduce long- and short-term holding.

 

TOPIC: Sustainable Herds

                        – The concept of sustainable herds is based on the arbitrary AML system which is based on unfair allocation practices and incomplete, faulty range data by BLM’s own admission.

                        – I urge an immediate moratorium on roundups until a sustainable, solid plan is established.

                        – Only if proven necessary, I support fertility control with caveats.

                        – I oppose castration and spaying of horses and non-reproducing herds on the range.

                        – I oppose utilizing sex ratios to manage herds.

                        – I support increasing available forage through livestock allotment conversion to wild horses.

 

 

TOPIC: Adoptions

                        – I oppose reducing adoption requirements.

                        – Adoption programs should not be modified to accommodate financial incentives.

                        – I support exceptions can be made for international adoption only with bonafide humane association with authority to guarantee well being of horses.

                        – I oppose BLM’s double standard of care requirements for adopters and short-term facilities.

 

TOPIC: Animal Welfare

                        – BLM must have complete transparency; I strongly object to the lack of transparency and support equal opportunity for all to participate – not only those invited by the BML, but for all public members to participate in internal BLM meetings, public observations and be given access to information.

                        – Interested members of the public must be allowed at all aspects of range monitoring, aerial counts, roundups and all holding facilities – must not be limited to specific individuals or organizations – must be representational and fair.

 

TOPIC: Science and Research

                        – Currently the BLM does not have the science or research needed to manage this program; BLM acknowledges it’s lacking in this area.

                        – All gathering of information/data (i.e. census, etc) must be done with independent public observers or utilizing video technology to provide documentation to the public.

                        – A National Academy of Science (NAS) report must make a fresh and comprehensive review of the foundation of the BLM’s program – beginning with the scientific/legal basis for the establishment of Appropriate Management Levels (AMLs), the utilization of on-the-range management options, the environmental assessment process, operations of BLM as a whole and by field office, etc.

 

This Strategy Document is based on a flawed foundation given that the Salazar initiative does not represent the fundamental reform that is needed. While I agree with portions of the initiative, it is premature to forward to Congress. Actions speak louder than words. BLM talks about change, but actions suggest business as usual:

                        o 6,000 horses scheduled for roundup and removal before the end of October. Deepening the fiscal black hole.

                        o Proposals on the table offering a new direction and cost-effective solutions. Bob Abbey invites proposals from the public then ignores them.

                        o National office talks reform; field offices continue business as usual policies.

 

I urge the BLM to immediately place a moratorium on roundups and schedule public hearings to create a program that protects and manages horses on the range, rather than warehousing them in government holding facilities.

Sincerely,

________________________________________________________

(first and last name & Organization)

_________________________________________________________

(complete mailing address)

After you’ve printed, signed and mailed your letter, please click here to TAKE ACTION with telling President Obama to suspend the summer roundups!

take action_obama

 

George Knapp’s Article: They Execute Horses, Don’t They?

Monday, July 26th, 2010

They execute horses, don’t they?

by GEORGE KNAPP
Las Vegas City Life Magazine
It would not be much of a surprise if the Bureau of Land Management decides to hold its next wild-horse roundup out at the super-secret Area 51 military facility, maybe down in the underground bunkers where they keep the corpses of extraterrestrials. The way it looks, BLM has decided to turn the mustangs into a black program, a classified, off-limits, shadowy mystery, something no one in the government can talk about and no one in the civilian world can access.

An exaggeration? Not by much. In previous years, horse roundups could be viewed by just about anyone so long as the observers didn’t interfere. After all, the mustangs belong to the American public, the ranges where they live are public property, and the millions of dollars spent each year to capture and corral the animals are all taxpayer dollars. So why wouldn’t the public have a right to see what’s going on?

Because BLM doesn’t want you to, that’s why.

Over the past few years, BLM has tightened the screws on its roundups, making it more difficult for both the press and the general public to keep an eye on what unfolds during these inherently violent operations. Apparently, the feds are tired of being eviscerated for their actions. Every time one of their hired wranglers is shown kicking a young colt, and every time a band of horses nearly collapses after being driven in terror by roaring helicopter blades over miles of rough terrain, BLM gets pummeled by an angry, horse-loving public. Who needs that?

BLM tried out its new strategy during the disastrous Calico Hills roundup last winter. The bureau went ahead with the operation even though horse experts warned it was a bad idea to drive horses for miles and miles over snow-covered volcanic rocks and in the coldest time of the year. BLM went forward anyway, and to keep prying eyes to a minimum, it found the only private land inside a half-million acre ocean of public range. That’s the spot that became Roundup HQ. By putting most of the central operations on private property, BLM had total control of who was allowed to enter, and when. It made a point of inviting lots of cattle-friendly, pro-hunter emissaries to join the festivities, along with a small assortment of mainstream journalists and a few horse advocates. But still, BLM called the shots and put limits on which days would be available for observers.

The fact that the Calico roundup turned into the bloodiest in memory is not lost on BLM. Most of the 100-plus horses that died didn’t keel over at the gather site. Rather, they died slower deaths at a holding facility BLM had authorized near Fallon. And, wouldn’t you know it, that facility was also constructed on private land, which means BLM (through the land owner/contractor) can control access to the horses 24/7, which is exactly what it has done. Before they were barred, horse advocates subsequently found dozens of mustangs with horrible wounds, inadequate food and water, and hooves that fell off from being run too hard. After a smattering of those stories hit the media, BLM decided it had enough. The Fallon corral is now completely off limits to everyone except BLM.

The privatization of the wild horse program has reached its zenith with the roundup now underway in Northern Nevada. BLM announced at the beginning that it planned to close off public access to the public lands where the horses live. This was done “for the good of the horses,” of course, and has nothing to do with BLM wanting to limit the bad press it gets every time one of its roundups results in the agonizing deaths of beautiful mustangs.

BLM can perhaps teach its fellow three-letter agency, the CIA, a thing or two about subterfuge. The current roundup in Northern Nevada is sort of a natural evolution of BLM’s spycraft tendencies. The bureau announced a few weeks ago that public lands in the vicinity of the Owyhee range would be off limits while the roundup was underway. BLM even declared air space over Owyhee would be closed to all traffic. Whether or not the bureau even has the authority to pull something like this is a question that needs to be answered in court one of these days, but shutting out the public from public lands with only the vaguest justification is pretty serious stuff. The last time I checked, BLM employees work for the taxpayers. The contractor who will be paid roughly a million dollars for the roundup is also working for the American taxpayer, but we’re not supposed to be able to see what they do? What the heck is the big secret out there in the high desert?

My own suspicion is that BLM doesn’t want to see video of any dead horses on the evening news. See, there were no dead horses on the Owyhee range, not until BLM started driving them like a bat out of hell across the desert. Once the horses started dying, BLM went to court and declared that the routine roundup, which had been in the planning stages for more than a year, is now an emergency rescue. Without BLM’s quick action, 75 percent of the horses would die horrible deaths, the agency claimed. But whatever emergency exists is there because of BLM’s own incompetence. Plus, it seems to spend more of its time trying to outwit horse advocates than taking care of the land.

The final move is a doozie. After horse advocates went back to federal court last week and got a judge to order BLM to allow for outside observers, BLM pulled yet another fast one. The entire Owyhee gather operation was again put onto private land, and BLM then lifted the ban on visitors to the public range. How magnanimous. Except the horse people who tried to find the private ranch were not only given the runaround but were repeatedly warned that if they crossed onto the private property, they would be arrested. Sheriff’s deputies followed them wherever they roamed. This is heavy-handed, totally unnecessary bullshit, exactly what BLM has been doing over the past several years.

The public pays for those roundups, it pays BLM salaries, and it pays for the management of the public ranges. We have every right to be out there to watch what BLM is doing with our money and with the horses. Whether you care about wild horses or not, those are your dollars being spent.

Of the 600-plus horses captured this week, BLM admits 21 have died so far. Of course, we don’t know what the real numbers are. We’ll just have to take BLM’s word for it.

George Knapp is a Peabody Award-winning investigative reporter for KLAS-TV Channel 8. You can reach him at gknapp@klastv.com

VIDEO: Thom Hartmann Radio Show Interview

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

 
Dear Friends,
 
Here is the video of Jerry Reynoldson and I chatting live with Thom Hartmann, July 22nd, on his radio show.
 
xo, Madeleine

 

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KLAS TV George Knapp: Horse Herds Pulled from Range, Despite Safety Concerns

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

ELKO COUNTY, Nev. — A wild horse roundup in northern Nevada has ended, for now. Phase one of the Tuscarora Gather captured 636 horses, but 21 mustangs died during the operation, mostly from a combination of stress, heat, and dehydration.

Now, the Bureau of Land Management is ready to start phase two of the roundup, unless wild horse advocates once again head to federal court.

BLM now says this was an emergency rescue, not a routine roundup, though there was no emergency, and no dead horses, until the roundup started. Critics ask why couldn’t this wait for a month or so, until the horses could be watered and the temperatures weren’t so hot?

Read the contempt motion filed by advocates

One reason is the BLM’s contractor, Sue Cattour, who is being paid more than $1 million, is already booked up later in the year. Also, a delayed gather might be easier on the horses, but could interfere with deer hunting season.

Either way, BLM is ready to spring into action again, though horse advocates might try to stop it.

In the high desert of Elko County, water is precious, but not that hard to find. The Chimney Reservoir located in one of the two herd areas next on BLM’s list was spotted by wild horse advocates Laura Leigh and Elyse Gardner as they flew over the range with the I-Team.

Will BLM argue there isn’t enough water here for wild horses, as it did in the Owyhee area? A roundup there caused 21 mustangs to die, so far.

During a hearing in federal court, Nevada wild horse boss Alan Shepard testified that water in Owyhee was limited, that none of it was fenced off from the horses, and that there were no cows on the range, statements which could cause problems later.

Read the declaration by Laura Leigh

For instance, the sprawling desert ranch reservoir is in Owyhee. But, BLM says, while it is on public land, the water is privately owned. That’s why there are fences around it, though the fence has a few gates for access.

Horse advocates say the main reason horses can’t get to water out here is the BLM has allowed ranchers to fence off many of the water sources on public land.

The overall message is, there is water, just not for horses.

Prior to the flight, we mapped out a course with pilot Matt Jahnke to make sure we would be flying over Rock Creek and Little Humboldt, the next targets on the roundup list. Once in the air, it became clear there is a lot of water and greenery in these herd areas. The landscape is punctuated by small creeks and ponds.

There are barren areas as well, and if someone wanted to paint a bleak picture, it would be easy enough to edit out the good stuff. Photos released by BLM of dried up water sources in Owyhee are authentic, but hardly accurate since they don’t paint the total picture.

Laura Leigh scouted Owyhee prior to the roundup, saw plenty of water, lots of fences, and, not surprisingly, cows everywhere.

“We didn’t see any horses. We saw a lot of cows,” she said.

Read a letter from BLM to Laura Leigh

And that’s what we saw from the air — lots of cows. Everywhere there was water, there were cows. We also saw bands of horses, running across pastures, kicking up clouds of dust on desert trails. It’s hard to tell from the air, but they didn’t look like the were dying.

The BLM says the public range can support around 4,000 cattle but only 400 or so horses. The Bureau vehemently denies it is removing horses to benefit cows, but the fact is, the two do compete for resources. BLM will allow the cows to remain in the herd areas, but the horses must go.

“We saw multiples of cows and water. I saw horses today, but not a quarter as many as cows. You see cows hanging around almost every water source,” said Elyse Gardner.

Critics have good reason to doubt BLM’s recent characterization of the Owyhee Gather as an emergency resource. The roundup was original scheduled for last year, but BLM surveyed the land and horses and found both in good shape, such good shape that they re-authorized cattle grazing and then put off the gather for a year.

In a film produced by BLM, the agency acknowledged some water holes in Owyhee would run dry by this June. If the water holes would be dry in June, why does BLM wait until the heat of mid-July to start its roundup, critics ask?

BLM news releases never characterized the gather as an emergency. There were no dead horses at all, not until contractor Sue Cattour started running the mustangs over many miles and saw them die in her corral. Only then did it become an emergency. If it really has been monitoring horses and the land, how did BLM not know what would happen?

“If it’s an emergency gather as they’re claiming, where they are going from zero dead to 75-percent of the herd dead in three days, that’s another indication something is not right here,” said Leigh.

Horse advocates point to a massive gold mine right next to the herd areas. It uses millions of gallons of water every day, suggesting there is enough water that BLM could drill a well and supply the horses, at least through the rough spell, and then remove them later when it is safer.

Cattour doesn’t like that idea. She says the horse advocates are to blame for recent deaths because they delayed the roundup for a few days by going to court. Cattour thinks the press and public should back off the BLM and let it do its job without so much scrutiny.
 

Source KLAS TV

Rare Acoustic Performance with S.A.M. Advisory Board Member, Henry Kapono This Saturday

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

smddwWe are pleased to announce that our good friend and Saving America’s Mustangs Advisory Board Member, Henry Kapono, is playing a rare acoustic performance this Saturday, July 24th. Tune into the CW Network at 8pm to watch.

Don’t miss out on this opportunity to see a truly amazing performer.

Sincerely,

Madeleine Pickens

Henry Kapono’s Website

cw

Madeleine Pickens will be on the Thom Hartmann National Radio Show Today, July 22

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Dear Friends and Supporters,

I’ll be streaming live with Thom Hartmann today at 11am Pacific Standard Time. Please listen to this national broadcast as I’ll discuss the roundups, my sanctuary plan, and how the American people can help solve this issue.

Sincerely,

Madeleine

Watch Live Video of this Interview

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