Seven’s

21 03 2011

By the time I got to Bruiser, at least, Seven’s had become aware of me, and they watched the watching. I decided to go back and see if they’d allow a little visit before I headed back around the hill.

Mona is looking a little poorly, but hopefully she’ll rebound quickly. Shane, seen between her and Seven, looks great. Ze at right.

Roja in view … You can see that Ze is definitely going to be grey.

Daddy Seven with son Ze, 2 in just 2.5 weeks, and stepdaughter Shane, who is right at 6 months.

He looks so big next to mama. Ze and his sister, Spring, were born in early April, but Seven breeding Roja in June last year should indicate a May baby this year.

How handsome is Mr. Seven? They weren’t too interested in a long visit, so I hit a pony trail that took me up onto a ridge below Round Top. When I looked back, they were back to grazing.

I ended up going all the way around Round Top! It’s not a very big hill, really, though it stands out in the basin as looking like a giant flying saucer from the interior accessible by road. I just like saying I walked all the way around the hill. 🙂 I don’t know where Chrome’s were then, but the next day, they were on the northeast side of Round Top, right near where I walked ’round.





Bruiser

20 03 2011

Bruiser is readily identifiable from a distance – and more so now because he’s by himself. When I saw him, we were quite a distance apart, and he was on a hill. Sometimes the horses spread way out grazing, and you can’t always see all the horses in a particular band because of hills, arroyos, etc. I had walked out to check the Round Top pond post-winter (or at least mostly post-snow), and I decided to go on out to him.

Sometimes you can’t see all of any one horse – just backs above ridges. That’s how I spotted Seven and Mona, though I didn’t know for a few minutes whether it WAS Seven and Mona … or Chrome and Jif (very light grey and dun … very light grey and dun) – until I saw more of them.

The pond has water, but it’s by no means full. Two of the non-dug-out ponds are dry or down to mud; Flat Top pond hasn’t been dug out yet, but it and the other ponds are very shallow. The main double pond is so shallow I can see hoofprints through the water tracking across its bottom.

Unfortunately, something else I saw out there shouldn’t have been there: tire tracks from an ATV. The Round Top pond got dug out because it’s just outside the McKenna Peak Wilderness Study Area boundary. Beyond the pond is WSA – no motorized/mechanized  vehicles allowed (not even chain saws) – “recreation vehicle use off existing travel routes … are not allowed.” Unfortunately, those weren’t the only tracks I’d see in the WSA; even deeper into the WSA, way to the south, more tracks. In fact, all along the main roads through the basin, someone was driving off onto the sides, making big circles and arcs. Why? Why not park on the road (not a lot of traffic!) or just off – right alongside – and GET OUT AND WALK?! These were places where it looked like the driver drove to the edge of a hill or ridge to look beyond – from inside the vehicle. I saw tracks like that all around the loop and near Filly Peak – even off the road along some horse trails and up into arroyos that the road crosses.

The whole photo itself, nothing to write home about. But don’t you love that gorgeous, graceful swish of his multicolored tail?

Bruiser is not a big guy, but he’s very stout. Without a mare to protect, he was very relaxed – not worried about me at all.

I passed below Seven’s band, grazing up a hill from the trail I walked out on (from the pond) – and as far as I know, they never saw me (this band, you know when they know). We were all right out in the open. I stopped a couple of times to let them see me … Seven was napping with his butt to me, Roja and Mona were grazing with their heads down, Shane and Ze were grazing, wandering, low behind a little “rise” between Seven and the girls. I decided to go on out to see Bruiser and discover if Spring was out of sight and also look over the hill he was on, which has a view down the drainage toward the Disappointment Road, hoping to spot the pintos.

Big Bruise, with the unnamed promontory behind him. The pyramid-shaped McKenna Peak – namesake of the WSA – is slightly to the left and back. Seven’s and Round Top are behind me.

I did walk on around, though his calm attitude from the beginning was the tipoff that Spring wasn’t around. He was almost out of sight when I got out to his hill – just his back visible as he grazed slightly on the “downside” of the hill. So I stopped and waited for him to graze his way into view. It’s a startling thing to look up from your peaceful grazing and see an intruder who has “snuck” up on you. And the wind was blowing from the south – toward me. He eventually looked up, kept chewing, and went back to grazing! Sometimes, they truly surprise me.

In past visits, I’ve driven slowly past a place along the Disappointment Road (which follows the boundary for a few miles on the southwest end) where the horses are sometimes visible – and which makes walking in to visit them quite a bit easier than walking in not knowing where in the WSA they could be – and haven’t seen the pintos – though I’ve seen David, Shadow and their Wind a couple of times. I was almost ready to turn back to Bruiser when I spotted something – down by the road. Sure enough, horses. I could identify Ty and part of a pinto and a couple of dark bays – Spring? But as I’ve already tipped off by my previous post, she wasn’t with them – must have been Mesa and/or Milagro and/or Maiku (the white marking over his neck above his withers is easier to see from one side). But I was hopeful at the time.

Oh, Bruiser. Where has our Spring gone?





A little light, a little glimpse

19 03 2011

The air this week was warmer, the wind just as stiff, the sun mostly losing its wager with the clouds. I forgot to apply sunscreen but managed to avoid sunburn despite some nice, long hikes and wonderful pony visits.

The biggest news of the “weekend” is that not only is Bruiser alone, Spring is MIA. Seven’s were very near Bruiser; not with them. I spotted the pintos and  visited them later; not with them. David’s? Nope. Chrome’s? Nope. Luna’s? Hook’s? Those are the bands in the area or close to that frequented by Bruiser and Spring when I saw them together and Bruiser otherwise these last few months. Nope. Didn’t see Cinch’s or Poco and Roach this visit, but in the last two visits, I’ve seen everybody but Spring.

When I walked out to the pintos – very close to the road but in a place where I wouldn’t have seen them if I hadn’t known they were there (I saw them originally from above!) – Milagro was the first to see me … then bachelor Mesa. Neither of them raised an alarm but went on grazing, so I was able to watch the other horses for a while before the others started to become aware of me. When Puzzle saw me, she looked around for mama, who was a little distance away. She broke into this flamboyant little trot …

Then stopped again for a look!

Shortly after, she was reunited with mama Chipeta.

Chipeta wasn’t too worried …

Kiowa, even less so!

The light broke though the clouds just before sunset, but the horses were so relaxed, they weren’t even facing me, let alone looking at me! Oh the hardship! 🙂 (The next day, I’d take a pic of six horses – all facing me, all ears pricked! Oh, the joy!) It was nice just to visit with these guys; I hadn’t spent any time with them all winter.

Corazon and Ty had a minor disagreement over sniffing rights on a manure pile. It always amazes me how high they can strike.

Moments later:

🙂

I got my first close look at the pintos in quite a while – enough to be fairly sure that both Reya (foreground), almost 4, and Spook, almost 3, are pregnant. So we’re looking at the possibility of four foals in the pinto band this year (with Kiowa and Chipeta). For new readers, Reya and Spook are Kiowa’s daughters. Interestingly, all her foals (since 2007 – Reya was released with her after the last roundup) are still with her … No other mare in the basin holds that distinction. Then again, the pintos stay fairly well isolated from the other bands (and there are three bachelors plus the band stallion with the band), so it’s not that surprising.

Last gasp of sunlight … I loved how they are so softly illuminated – along with the hills in the background.

Not a chance of seeing the not-quite-full moon come up because it was so cloudy. Anyone going to watch the supermoon come up tonight? The official time of moonrise – in Durango, at least – is 7:49 p.m., according to our story. That never seems to account for the fact that we’re ringed by mountains – or at least high ridges – but there it is. Get out and enjoy it, coming up over land I hope you love.





Telluride

18 03 2011

Many thanks to Scott and Lisa at the Wilkinson Public Library in Telluride for hosting the educational program about PZP and Spring Creek Basin mustangs last night.

Particular thanks to Chris, reader of this blog and Telluride resident, for your help locating a venue and working on dates and posting fliers around town! I hope we’ll have the opportunity soon to have a joint visit with the horses in the basin.

I appreciate all the people who came out on a busy and drizzly St. Patrick’s Day evening in Telluride and listened to me ramble and asked great questions about the horses and PZP. Information about the BLM scoping notice mentioned during the presentation will be available on this blog when it comes out.

Thanks also to Scott Ransom, who provided a showing of an ABC program about wild horses and the inmate training program at Canon City as well as programs that connect troubled kids and horses. (The longer version of this film is called “Wild Horse Redemption.”)

“Thanks” doesn’t begin to convey my gratitude to JT, who gave a check to NMA/CO that will effectively fund the first round of PZP for our mares. THANK YOU!

The next educational presentation about the Spring Creek Basin mustangs and the upcoming roundup and fertility control program will be held April 13 at the La Plata County Fairgrounds in Durango (time to be announced).





For the beauty of it all

15 03 2011

On that last visit to the horses, from which I ended up with 2,000+ photos, from which these last several batches of posts have come, I came upon Bounce’s toward the end of the day. It was about midafternoon, really, but I stayed with them longer than I realized, and the sun was sinking when I finally left. I saw all but four bands that day, including some I hadn’t seen except at a distance all winter. I was looking specifically for Bounce’s … and they were my last, ultra-glorious visit of the day.

I have two basic, personal “rules” of visiting the basin: Don’t flirt with wet weather, and don’t set an agenda.

So “looking specifically for Bounce’s” – or anybody – was breaking the “rules.” But sometimes some rules are meant to be broken (like “the rule of thirds” and “always shoot with the sun at your back”). And I just had a feeling … and “in the back,” where I thought they might be, sure enough, there they were.

Hello, lovely. It’s been awhile, eh?

Whisper is so big and so dark that when I first walked out, I was constantly looking between him and Bounce to determine which one, in fact, WAS Bounce.

But when I got closer, more characteristics – youthful – started to reveal themselves. Whisper was close to Alegre, and Bounce was farther out. In fact, I’m not really sure when Bounce realized I was there. I sat down up from Alegre, and I ended up there for goodness knows how long.

Definitely March. Gorgeous and sunny, but the wind – and it was stiff – had a chill edge to it; I should have worn my jacket. The La Sals were visible in the distance – unlike the previous day, when they were wreathed in clouds – but I stayed long enough that their crown became a shroud that hid them, eventually, fully. A storm brewing!

Not much later, even this view of the La Sals would be gone, hidden by snow clouds.

Over the basin, brilliant sunshine – to the northwest and across the north: clouds. Looking east, a normal sunny blue day in Colorado; looking north-northwest (toward the mountains) … something a little special with the light.

Lovely light on lovely Alegre.

And bugs. 🙂 I don’t know what they were – something I imagine the trout would rise to gobble (if there were trout in Spring Creek Basin!). Tiny – half an inch long? – mostly sheer shimmering translucent wings, bodies teeny. They came through the air with the wind all at once in a flutter of half a dozen, in waves, every so often. One landed near me … at least a couple kissed Alegre on her lovely nose.

Her reaction after her “kiss.”

There’s Bounce yonder … mountains winked out of sight …

We had mostly sunshine …

… and a few moments of cloud cover. Is it weird that all the shapes I saw in the clouds were carnivores – and upside down?

Is she not the most gorgeous of girls?

She paused her grazing for a nap …

… and we all napped together.

The ground, rocky as it is in that area, was surprisingly comfortable. The chill-tipped wind, not so much. I think I really would have drifted peacefully into full sleep except that I was shivering. ‘Legs stood close by, eyes mostly closed, checking on me now and then as I raised my head to check on her. I got the feeling a foal might have … mama standing protectively nearby … all right with the world. About a month now, and our first foals of the season will be feeling just that!

Bounce disappeared from sight. The ground dropped off between us and him – Whisper, in the photo above, is standing just on the edge, I think.

I can’t come up with a word for how wonderfulgorgeousbeautifulsublimephenomenalmagnificentastoundingbrilliantfantastic it was.

This is the first *I* knew that HE knew I was there. He may have known before, but neither Alegre’s nor Whisper’s behavior would have tipped him off – and he does look a little surprised, eh? 🙂

He went out of sight again … and awhile later, I looked over, and he had come up – just his head in view – behind Whisper. The next events were funny!

Staying just like that – just his head in view (I was still lying on the ground), he nickered at Alegre. She ignored him. He nickered again. She was grazing – ignoring him that I could tell. More nickering … she eventually grazed her way toward – but not to – him.

One of the funniest things I’ve seen yet. 🙂 She wandered on up the hill and above me and around the other side of me while he stood on the edge of decision.

How handsome is he? Shooting toward the sun as it was just above Knife Edge – my camera did not want to focus on him. This is him finally following Alegre.

Whisper followed, too, of course.

Handsome daddy Bounce + gorgeous mama Alegre = one good looking boy!

Bounce and Whisper. The boy will be 2 in May.

See the grey muzzle? Showing his wisdom. 🙂

Glorious

And that catches me up on my last visit!

It’s a tricky thing in the mountains to say too early “It’s spring!” But that’s just how it feels. I’ve lived here long enough now to know “the rule”: Don’t be hasty ushering in spring because that’s just the time Mother Nature alerts you that she’s the ruler of the universe and decides to go cavorting with Father Winter after she’s teased you with melting snow and 60-degree weather and glorious sunshine (do I say glorious a lot?). That said, it sure feels like spring! We had a pretty mild winter, though … which portends a rather dry summer.

Fuzzy coats are still fairly thick (and that’s another sign that it’s not quite over yet, winter …), and the horses look – say it with me: glorious. 🙂





Grey(s), illuminated

14 03 2011

Prepare ye for gorgeousity.

This little girl doesn’t often find the spotlight, but when it finds her – wow! Gemma

Big sister Terra – isn’t she divine?

Handsomest. Does he glow? He glows.

Some from before the light returned:

Gemma and daddy

Does it seem that, whatever lack of light there was, they seem to enrich what IS there?

I just love them.

Daddy and his daughters …

Sisters

And back to light:

Enjoying the sunshine …

Do you recognize these poses?

He comes by it naturally, eh? 🙂

I told you he glowed.

Gemma in light …

She loves her daddy! He wasn’t too keen on public displays of affection. 🙂

Grey/Traveler and Gemma

Daddy and his gorgeous girls

Mama in the background

Mama in beauty

Public affection – gotcha. 🙂

Gemma

What a visit!





Peaceful grey(s)

13 03 2011

Grey/Traveler and Houdini. I wish his eye was visible, but this is a common view – Grey grazing nearby and Houdini farther away.

This also is common: Daddy with his girls … or … the girls with their daddy!

Isn’t he gorgeous? Doesn’t he glow? (Really, he does – I have evidence coming later.)

With the broad band of clouds covering the rising sun, the color of the day was fairly dull at this point … but I think you can still see a bit of light illuminating the horses’ coats – and here also, the far background of hills … But it was starting to edge away, that big cloud … revealing brief moments like this:

A teaser of light to come …

So many more photos, so little time!

Here’s a shameless plug (which I need to learn to do more of, I’m afraid): I’m speaking at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Wilkinson Public Library in Telluride – scroll down on the right – about the horses, the upcoming roundup and adoption and, very particularly and specifically, about fertility control and the annual program we hope to implement in the basin this fall. The little blurb is, unfortunately, misleading, and that’s not my photo and those are not Spring Creek Basin mustangs. I am in that film, “Mustangs and Renegades” (formerly “Disappointment Valley”), but I have not seen it, and I will not be talking about the film. It was shown there last month, which is the library’s connection.

If any of you are local and can make it, please come and please introduce yourself/ves and let me know about your experiences with the horses!

I mention that, too, because I’m going to try to get more pix up in the next couple of days, but then I’ll be in the basin Wednesday and part of Thursday leading up to my talk in Telluride … visiting with the horses again and collecting more photos and observations. We’re about a month away from the start of our foaling season, and most of the mares are showing definite signs of things to come. Most of our foals should be born in April and May, but our season will go through the summer and into September with at least a few mares.

If you’re praying for a suggestion of what to do, the upcoming scoping letter here will be another chance to do something positive for better management of our mustangs – this scoping letter in particular, for our Spring Creek Basin mustangs. I’ll provide a link to it as soon as I know it’s out (I assume it will be linkable). Public comment helped McCullough Peaks and Pryor Mountain fertility control programs become a reality (and Little Book Cliff’s at the outset – and continuing!); we’ll need them from you here, too.





McCullough Peaks approves PZP

12 03 2011

http://trib.com/news/state-and-regional/article_01e28808-7d9f-518e-8436-83f6f2d58137.html?mode=story

By Martin Kidston

Billings Gazette

CODY — The Bureau of Land Management will begin darting wild mares in the McCullough Peaks with a contraceptive later this month in a move that the agency says will cost less than past roundups and help stabilize the herd’s population.

Officials with the BLM’s Cody Field Office will dart mares over the age of 1 with the fertility control drug porcine zona pellucida, or PZP, in hopes of establishing a viable population of 70 to 140 wild hores.

Tricia Hatle, the BLM’s wild horse specialist in Cody, said Monday that two trained wildlife darters will administer the vaccine using capture guns. The effort is expected to run through 2015.

“One person will dart the mare, and the other person will be the observer,” she said. “We’ll recover the dart so we know if the vaccine was injected. It’s administered in the hip, in the muscle. It’s about 1 cc, a very small amount of liquid.”

Hatle said targeted mares will receive .5 cc of PZP. The drug would be mixed with .5 cc of an emulsifier known as Freund’s Modified Adjuvant.

Hatle said the vaccine works by blocking sperm from penetrating the mare’s egg. The PZP will be shipped to Cody by the Science and Conservation Center at ZooMontana in Billings, Mont.

In past years, Hatle said, management of wild horses in the McCullough Peaks has largely relied upon gathers and removals to control the population.

But those efforts have been costly. In 2004, when 362 horses were removed from the McCullough Peaks management area, the cost reached $135,000. In 2009, when 94 horses were removed, the cost exceeded $102,000.

“Our goal is to keep the herd at 140 or below,” Hatle said. “As of February, we were at 124 adults, and we’ve had one foal born so far.”

Hatle said the wild horses in the McCullough Peaks generally live 25 to 30 years — a little longer than their wild counterparts roaming Montana’s Pryor Mountains.

As the mares mature, she said, they’ll be permitted to foal. The newborns will ultimately replace older horses that die off.

“What you want to balance out is having foals born in proportion to horses that die of old age, so your population stays at a balanced level,” Hatle said. “You do this by allowing the mares to foal between 3 and 7 years of age.”

Mares that reach the foaling age will no longer be treated with PZP, she said. It may take one or two years after vaccination before the drug wears off.

“This allows the mare to mature fully before they foal,” Hatle said. “It’s easier to let them have a foal at 3 to 6 years. Right now, I have mares foaling at two years.”

Sarah Beckwith, public affairs officer for the BLM’s Wind River/Bighorn Basin District, said the new contraceptive program will cost less than past roundups.

She said Friends of A Legacy-McCullough Peaks Mustangs will pay for the PZP and assist in the field. The only cost associated with the program, she said, is Hatle’s time administering the vaccine.

“FOAL will be donating its time and paying for the PZP, and (Hatle) is doing this within her workday, so there’s no extra cost,” Beckwith said. “It’ll be much cheaper than the roundups.”

Members of FOAL couldn’t be reached Monday for comment, but Beckwith lauded the group for its efforts in addressing the herd’s long-term care.

“It’s such a helpful and wonderful partnership we have there with them,” Beckwith said. “Their goal is the same as ours — to reduce the need of those roundups. With this program, that’s what we’re aiming to do.

Contact Martin Kidston at 307-527-7250 or mkidston@billingsgazette.com





Welcoming committee

11 03 2011

After I left Duke and the boys and Luna’s band and Hook’s band, I walked on up and along the ridge until I saw the band I’ve mentioned briefly previously.

Houdini, Terra and Gemma coming to see what I’m doing – or, perhaps, coming to see *better* what I am and what I’m doing. It happens rarely, but it still surprises me and fills me with unreasonable joy when it happens.

I had just come within sight of them and stopped to wait for them to see me. Most of the time, they make some determination – usually favorable, I assume – and go back to grazing. This area slopes down from the highest ridge in the area toward a big arroyo that cuts through the greater area, which is dissected by shallow-ish arroyos that feed into the bigger one. I hiked through two to eventually get out to where they stopped and went back to grazing. They could have stayed where they were or gone anywhere if they had any fear. Yet they came *toward* me, and I can’t explain that. Though Houdini came running up with her daughters, she hung back during my entire time with them, which was glorious.

Keeping an eye on me … carrying the next generation. Wise Houdini … not as easy with me as Alpha and Luna but easily as much a queen among mustangs. I’d give this elder girl a break, too. This year’s foal will also be the fifth since I’ve known her (all fillies!) and been documenting the horses. Like Luna, all surviving. Like Luna and Alpha and the rest, a fantastic mother.





Portraits

9 03 2011

Lovely, lovely Alpha-mare

Cute-n-curious Gideon

The boy with his mama Luna

When Storm and Twister finally had enough and went their separate ways, Storm came innocently back across the arroyo and up the trail toward mama. But it was also the track straight to Luna, and Butch was charging after him in a flash – not play but a definite warning! Storm got away and came up the hill on the other side of mama – where she was napping still as you see in the photo.

Butch back with Luna – I noticed these interesting curls on the back of his hind legs. How cute is that?