Water delivery, part 2

18 06 2012

Today was the second delivery of water to the catchment – and this time, it went directly into the storage tank.

Cecil Foster of Foster’s Water prepares to carry his water hose up his ladder to pump water into the tank.

Cecil at the top of the ladder.

A closer look at the drinking troughs.

View at the top: the water hose inside the hatch on top of the storage tank. See the glitter? That’s the water! The tank is now nearly full!

I should have taken pix of Chrome’s band on our way in; they were right off the road. They had moved away by the time we headed out. But close enough to take advantage of this good water.





Water for mustangs

16 06 2012

It’s dry out there, folks.

That’s neither new news nor surprising news.

We haven’t had any rain since late April, and the forecast for the forseeable future shows perfect yellow balls of sunshine and highs in the 90s. On July 1, we’re supposed to hit 99.

Bleak. That’s what I call that forecast.

Three ponds have water. Wildcat Spring has water. The trickle is trickling. There are random seeps and springs around in arroyos – all small, all not-so-good to poor quality. The ponds all have gone dry in previous years – last year, the year before, that I’ve documented – but the monsoons always come. Some years better than others, but they always come. This year promises to get worse before we get those monsoons.

Our BLM folks at the Tres Rios Field Office in Dolores are well aware of the drought conditions and are taking steps to ensure the horses have water to get through the worst of the dry season.

Among the things our recently awarded Director’s Challenge grant money will fund here: water enhancement projects. From 2009 to 2010, five ponds were dug out (made deeper; they silt in – get shallow – because of the erodable soil), and two more are scheduled to be dug out this year (hopefully before the monsoons come!). We’re talking about water guzzlers, solar pumps on wells (something we’re looking at to enhance “the trickle” into something with a bit more flow) and possibly a second water catchment.

I get a lot of questions about our water catchment. What it is, how it works, how it benefits the horses.

Two aprons are laid out on a slope and fenced (to keep sharp-hooved wildlife out). Water in the form of rain or snow falls on the aprons and drains down to filters, then into a pipeline that runs down to a 16,000-gallon storage tank. From there, lines carry water to two troughs, which hold water controlled by floats. I turn the valve on when the weather starts warming up in early spring, and I turn it off when it starts to freeze at the start of winter (so the lines don’t freeze and break).

This is the only clean water to which the horses have access.

Because of the alkaline quality of the soil, the water is highly saline. I also get questions about the “white soil.” That’s salt on the surface of the soil. Crazy but true. The horses, of course, have adapted. It’s also muddy, and at times like this, sure, there are seeps – where the water comes up and fills salty, muddy hoof-print-size puddles. Not a lot of quantity, let alone quality.

Are you still with me?

This weekend, BLM ordered the first delivery of 4,000 gallons (what the truck holds; more coming) to the catchment, which is about a quarter full after the mild winter and no rain since April and horses drinking.

Can I get a yahooooooooooooooooooooooo? 🙂

Here’s Cecil Foster of Foster’s Water preparing to drain water onto one of the aprons. Cecil has been hauling water to the catchment for years. In recent years, deliveries were paid for by the National Mustang Association, Colorado chapter. NMA/CO paid for the water catchment to be built more than a decade ago, and there are a couple of signs on the fence that say so. (Remember Pati and David Temple, for whom baby Temple is named? This is one of many projects they have honcho’d over the years through NMA/CO.)

Water starting to flow. This pic shows both aprons.

In this pic, you can see the green storage tank and the drinking troughs (very small in this image, barely visible – they’re to the right of the tank) in the background.

This is the perspective from the lower end looking up toward the road. The filters are apparently a little clogged; the water shouldn’t pool so much before draining. We need to get them cleaned out before the rains DO hit. The rocks on the aprons are just to hold it down.

Looking across the aprons to the northwest. One of the troughs is a little more visible in this image.

And a better view of the tank and troughs.

The two aprons of the catchment, side by side.

So that’s what they are, how they work and how they benefit the horses. One slight negative is the location – most of the horses are not in this area. Chrome’s band has consistently called this area home for the last couple of years, and they’re the only ones I know of that drink here consistently. That’s good, but it’s also one of the reasons we’re looking at potential locations for a second catchment (and have been the last several years).

Good water benefits more wildlife than just the horses. 🙂 This little guy (gal?) is perched on a rock on one of the aprons. In the foreground is the blurred berm of the apron; just behind the lizard’s rock is the water from Cecil’s truck flowing down to the filter on its way to the tank to become drinking water for the horses.

Good stuff. Thanks, BLM. 🙂





SCB mustangs in the spotlight

22 04 2012

Most readers of this blog aren’t local to this neck of the woods, but if you are, I’d like to invite you to the “Southwest Colorado Spring Creek Basin Wild Horse Management Program” at the Center of Southwest Studies at Fort Lewis College in Durango. It’s part of the center’s “2012 Program Series: Celebrating the Preservation of our Natural and Cultural Heritage.”

Guest speakers will be Fran Ackley from Canon City; Tom Rice from the Tres Rios Field Office in Dolores; and Kathe Hayes with the San Juan Mountains Association. Our Disappointment Wild Bunch Partners will represent our member groups – National Mustang Association/Colorado, Mesa Verde Back Country Horsemen, Four Corners Back Country Horsemen and SJMA – during the event. It’s a great way to let the public know about our groups individually and Wild Bunch as a whole, and educate people about our Spring Creek Basin mustangs and how we help, including being part of the Director’s Challenge award that netted our BLM office $25,000 for projects for the horses. We’re excited to be part of this educational series hosted by the Center of Southwest Studies!

The event will start with a reception at 5:30 followed by the program at 6 p.m. Tuesday, April 24, in the center’s Lyceum on the Fort Lewis College campus.

If you are local, or even passing through, we hope to see you there!





Piece of the pie

22 03 2012

“Nearly $US300,000 in funding has been approved by the Bureau of Land Management for 12 projects aimed at improving Western rangeland conditions where wild horses and burros roam.”

“* Tres Rios Field Office, Southwest District, Colorado, Spring Creek Basin HMA: This project is aimed at expanding the ongoing successful partnership with the Disappointment Wild Bunch Partners to include such actions as herd monitoring, fence repairs, invasive weed inventory and treatments, illegal route closures, and travel management sign installation. Funding amount from the Director’s Challenge: $25,000”

The Grand Junction Field Office also was awarded $25,000 for ongoing partnership with Friends of the Mustangs for the Little Book Cliffs herd. Congratulations!!

Read more about it.

Thanks to Wild Bunch’s Tif (adopter of Ze and Asher) for this news!





Moved by purpose

9 10 2011

Yesterday, I sent a friend a quote I read on another blog:

“Think of all the beauty still left around us and be happy.” – Anne Frank

Today, I picked up a couple of the magazines that have accumulated in the last few months, that I’ve been too busy to look at, and read a headline about having purpose in your photography. I’ve tried to do that with mine, of the mustangs of Spring Creek Basin. I couldn’t quite read the article.

Then I picked up the latest issue of News Photographer. Though I no longer take photos as part of my job, I keep my subscription. The story was by an American photojournalist embedded at a NATO hospital in Kandahar, Afghanistan. I read most of it. The photos are intense. One small part of the opening photo, spread across two pages, stays with me, a nurse or doctor, looking over her shoulder at something behind the photographer … her hand under that of the man in the bed; he doesn’t seem like he could possibly be aware.

At the end of the article, after a particularly difficult day, the photographer spots James Nachtwey, war photographer, and stops to speak with him, to tell him about his influence, the reason he’s standing there, at a NATO hospital a world away from his home. The article ends with this quote:

“If you go some place for a purpose, you want to fulfill that purpose. It requires you to keep yourself together, and pay attention and concentrate and get the job done – well.” – James Nachtwey.

That’s exactly – exactly – how I felt at the roundup. A dear few, much respected and loved people helped me keep it together; I would have been lost without you. I would have been lost all along without the purpose of the horses. To all of you helping with that purpose … I thank you again and again and again …





Final adoption tally

25 09 2011

Ze and Milagro were adopted – very locally – this morning, and Gideon, Hannah and Briosa were picked up, so just Pinon, Baylee, Iya and Liberty went on to Canon City. Fran Ackley told one of our NMA/CO folks that this was the best adoption in three years.

Thank you thank you thank you thank you to all the adopters who made it happen.

We have tentative word that all the horses that initially went to Canon City have been spoken for.

I’ve had word already about Sage and Cuatro (adopted together, and Hannah and Briosa are joining them) Varoujan and Rio, and all of them are doing very well and settling right into their new homes. The adopted foal is doing amazingly well – Ze joined him this morning.

If anyone is interested in Pinon (3-year-old colt), Baylee (4-year-old mare), Iya (3-year-old mare) or Liberty (2-year-old filly), get in touch with me, and I will put you in touch with Lona Kossnar at Canon City (or contact her directly). Each horse’s certificate that I made went with Lona, and it will stay with them if you adopt that horse.





Another adoption update

24 09 2011

I hope to have another one tomorrow, when all is said and done at the fairgrounds, but for now, a quick note to let ya’ll know how really well the adoption went today.

All the foals were adopted and have gone to new homes.

A few horses are waiting at the fairgrounds for pickup in the morning, and we think we’ll have at least one other adopted then.

Just five horses – Iya (3, filly), Baylee (4, filly), Liberty (2, filly), Milagro (2, colt) and Pinon (3, colt) – still need homes, so if you’re at all conflicted, you have until tomorrow morning to decide (the earlier you can get there, the better; we’ll start tearing down at 8 a.m.). Those horses will then go to Canon City, where you also may adopt them at a later date.

Thank you so much to the folks who adopted our Spring Creek Basin mustangs! Please keep in touch and let us know how you’re getting along!

Many thanks again to Fran, Lona and Ted from Canon City, and to our own Tom Rice and Ann Bond, who were there all day (and yesterday).

Wild Bunch … couldn’t do it without you … Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Ponies … we love you, will miss you, know you will be loved still.





Time

13 09 2011

Thank you to all who have offered your support, your tears, your concerns, your optimism and hope. I can’t begin to tell you how much it means.

The last four years (and before that … 13 years back since others in our group have been advocating for our Spring Creek Basin mustangs?) have been difficult … The last few days have been more difficult still. It will get better. We have been working too long and too hard and with too much single-minded purpose to settle for any other outcome.

I’m packing now. I need to buy food. I’ll be at work till midnight, home around 1 a.m., and then I’ll be on the road to the basin in the morning. I’ll know more tomorrow … with probably no way to relay it here.

Again, BLM plans to have a hot line to call for information about each day’s roundup activities: (970) 882-6843.

I do not think I will have enough of a signal to connect to the blog via my cell phone for updates, so anything from me will have to wait until I return home, which probably won’t be until Monday.

The horses are strong. They’re in excellent health. They’re resilient and they are just damn tough. They will adapt. We all will – because we have to. The coming years will bring even more changes – positive changes. The roundup is not the end of the story, just the end of a chapter, and as time goes on and it’s further in our past, it will be yet another thing to learn from and channel our management into better forms. We have to get through this to get there.

Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you …

… for all your care.





Adoption flier

11 09 2011

While we’re posting this flier about the coming training demonstration and adoption (Sept. 23-24) around the region, I thought I’d post the flier here on the blog as well. You never know …

Thank you to all the volunteers posting this in Farmington, N.M., and Moab, Utah, and as far away as Montrose and Grand Junction, as well as locally in Cortez, Dolores, Mancos, Durango, Bayfield, Pagosa Springs, Norwood, Ouray, Ridgway and Telluride! Thank you!





The adoption

5 09 2011

Time to talk about the adoption related to the roundup. We have some educational opportunities in the works that I think will both draw adopters and help people keep their mustangs.

Our groups – Disappointment Wild Bunch Partners, made up of representatives from NMA/CO, Four Corners and Mesa Verde Back Country Horsemen, and San Juan Mountains Association – are already working to promote the adoption. I’ve been doing it with my talks that started in February this year, we have letters to the editor and “public service announcements” out to several local newspapers, and we are going to post fliers in locations around the region. BLM also will do some advertising. No matter how BLM divvies up the horses post-roundup, probably 25 or fewer horses will be available for adoption.

NMA/CO has enlisted the services of a local trainer, Ems Rapp of Durango – who adopted a Spring Creek Basin colt (Rock On) in 2007 – to help adopters with their new horses. NMA/CO will pay for her services, and we will encourage each adopter to take advantage of this offer.

It is important to note that this is an offer made by the COLORADO CHAPTER of the NATIONAL MUSTANG ASSOCIATION and has nothing to do with BLM.

We hope it will help folks get started on the right “hoof” with their mustang, and we hope it will lead to greater retention of adopted horses.

If you are local, plan to adopt and want more information, call Pati Temple (NMA/CO board member, adopter of several mustangs) at (970) 564-8400. She will be coordinating training help with Ems.

All the activities related to the adoption will take place at the Montezuma County Fairgrounds, a few miles east of Cortez, Colo., on U.S. Highway 160.

From 5 to 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 23, the evening before the adoption, Ems will give a presentation at the fairgrounds with her gorgeous boy, Rock On, now a 6-year-old. (Incredibly, I don’t have any pix of them!) This also is a change from the usual – instead of pulling a terrified young mustang away from his/her compadres, Ems will show potential adopters all the great potential of their mustangs, using Rock On as an example of mustangs in general and Spring Creek Basin mustangs specifically!

Rock On does, in fact, rock, and we think you’ll love him as much as we do. He also will be on-site the day of the adoption (Saturday, Sept. 24) as an ambassador for Spring Creek Basin mustangs.

In addition, Vern and Jeri Friesen (4CBCH members) will be ambassadors with their mustangs, Dolly and Lipton (2000 adoptees), and Wayne Goodall will be there with Tumbleweed II (2005) and his grandson, who also has a Spring Creek Basin mustang, adopted in 2007, I think. Vern and Jeri have taken their mustangs back to Spring Creek Basin almost every year to ride during 4CBCH’s annual wild horse count, and Wayne has a long history as a mustang ambassador. Dolly, Lipton and Tumbleweed are awesome!

Adoption activities will start at 8 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 24, at the Montezuma County fairgrounds. I believe this is when BLM will start taking applications from potential adopters. The bidding will start at 10 and end at 11 a.m.

This will be “silent bidding,” as opposed to “auctioneer-type” bidding – you’ll write your bid on a sheet that corresponds by number to particular horses (they’ll have the number tags by then) – and update your bid as people bid against you (and you against them!).

For each adopter, I plan to have available a packet that contains information about their horse – photos, sire and dam, birthday, siblings and simple history, including any insights to their personalities and/or fun stories. I will be at the fairgrounds both days to talk to people about the horses. Another thing I’m thinking about doing pulls another idea from Matt Dillon of the Pryor Mountain herd, who had information sheets at the 2009 Pryor Mountain adoption that listed each horse by number and name. So if you’re familiar with the horses through this blog, you’ll be able to find them by name.

Our groups will have volunteers present to also give advice and information about their experiences with the herd. Some of these folks have been visiting the basin for up to 15 years!

Mesa Verde Back Country Horsemen will have drinks available right at the table where Disappointment Wild Bunch Partners will have other information.

We want the adoption to be more than “bid and haul.” We want to provide information that will help ensure that our horses, which are becoming your horses, have long, happy lives with you who adopt them.

Again, if I can answer any questions, leave a comment or email me at mtbgrrl (at) fone (dot) net.