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.





News article about coming roundup

8 08 2011

The Cortez Journal published an article Saturday about the coming roundup/EA.

And on Monday, The Durango Herald published a letter to the editor about the roundup and adoption by our own Pati Temple (NMA/CO).





Spring Creek Basin roundup EA

2 08 2011

Spring Creek Basin Wild Horse Herd 2011 Gather Plan Environmental Assessment   

The Bureau of Land Management issued the final environmental assessment and decision record for its gather plan for the wild horse population in the Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area southwest of Norwood, Colo.

Beginning about Thursday, September 15, BLM will gather approximately 60 wild horses in the Herd Management Area, which is a 21,932 acre area managed for a healthy wild horse herd that is in balance with other resources and uses. The current estimated population of wild horses in the HMA is about 90. This number is based on ground survey completed in May 2011 by volunteers with the Four Corners Backcountry Horsemen and includes the 2011 foal crop.

The appropriate management level identified for the population in this HMA is between 35 to 65 wild horses. Up to 10 of the captured adult horses will be released to maintain herd population within the established appropriate management level. The application of the contraceptive porcine zona pellucida will be administered to the mares upon release.

Wild horse numbers have increased an average of 23 percent per year since the HMA was gathered in 2007, thereby reducing the frequency of gathers.

25 of the wild horses gathered will be available for adoption through BLM’s wild horse and burro program.  The adoption will be held at the Montezuma County Fairgrounds, east of Cortez, CO on Saturday, September 24th beginning at 9AM. Individuals interested in adopting a horse must meet corral and shelter requirements. These standards can be found by visiting the following website: https://www.blm.gov/adoptahorse/requirements.php

The wild horses not adopted will be placed in long-term pastures.

Link to the above information can be found at this website.

Link to the EA in PDF version can be found here: http://www.blm.gov/pgdata/etc/medialib/blm/co/field_offices/san_juan_public_lands/pdf.Par.10445.File.dat/DOI-BLM-CO-S010-2011-0062EA_7252011.pdf





Moving on …

2 08 2011

Editor’s note (warning): This is a fairly long post – all words, no pix. It combines some realities with some hopes, and hopefully, the overall message is, in fact, one of optimism. It’s a little “news” and a little “response” to “just leave them alone.” Again, I am no particular expert. I hold no degree in the areas of wild horse or range management (though I was briefly a range mgmt major). And I certainly have no expertise whatsoever about herd management areas other than Spring Creek Basin. For Spring Creek Basin, however, I will defend my extensive knowledge of both the range and the horses, based on near-weekly visits for almost the last four years. Sometimes you preach to the choir … and sometimes you have visitors. I do hope this doesn’t come across as preaching but rather my continuing dedication to education. Perhaps in wanting to avoid “preaching,” I’ve slacked on education, as I’ve heard that some don’t understand what we’re trying to do here. That does seem to make me appear an “expert” – in my own mind, at least – but other than my own common sense and observations, I really can’t claim that moniker.

The Jeep, my chariot of freedom, had a two-day stint at the mechanic’s last week, but I don’t think I’d have gone to the basin if I could have. Some emotions still too raw, the nature of Twister’s injury too … just *too much,* maybe. How could I go back and enjoy the others, knowing he wasn’t part of the whole, that which I enjoy so fiercely?

For part of my part in the coming roundup, I’m working on an ID book for BLM, with photos of each horse and basic info. Having as many photos as I do of everybody, it seems like it would be an easy task, but although I started my documentation project (how formal a description that seems now) with the goal of getting full photos of each horse showing markings and mane orientations, my photos in more recent years have left that goal far behind – and become somewhat unnecessary as I know each horse on sight and can specify most even from a considerable distance. I’ve been saving particular photos as I go along in a particular file, but I’m not THAT organized, so the labor in this ID book is to go back through photos – mostly using my blog-photo files to jog my memory and then finding the original photo from the date taken.

The days I wasn’t in the basin, before I got back the almost-fixed Jeep (it IS 11 years old, and it does have 280K miles on it, and I can’t bear the thought of parting with it) and drove into the mountains out my back door (which I’ve done only once this year?), I worked on the “book,” and I went through photos, and I think that process – those reminiscences of not only the horses themselves but the times spent with the horses – was a bigger healing help than I could have anticipated. Pictures are worth so ever much more than simply 1,000 words.

Time marches on … The roundup is less than two months away. I thought I was preparing myself for that particular loss … and then unexpected Twister … We take what comes, we find the good, the positive, and we move on. The horses would understand that, if we can’t.

I want people to know – again – that the roundup and removal of some Spring Creek Basin mustangs is necessary: Because of past management, because of current conditions, because we hope to institute better – sustainable – management with this event that eases the future and provides more for the well-being of the horses than for the convenience of humans. Because a roundup now, while the horses are in good condition, is better for them than going to the point where they are NOT in good condition (such as was the case last time). It’s also better for the finite range that sustains them – that will continue to sustain them.

The day of the evening I found Twister was a big day in Spring Creek Basin. Twelve people toured the basin with me, all but four of us BLM or Forest Service (management of San Juan Public Lands is “Service First,” which includes both Forest Service and BLM). This cannot be other than public information, so I’m “announcing” it here (it’s in the preliminary EA): Jim Dollerschell, manager of the Little Book Cliffs herd – the roundup of which was CANCELED this year because of the successful annual PZP darting program there – will be in charge of our roundup, the “contracting officer,” I think, is the particular title. I can’t tell you how relieved I am about this. Also, Wayne Werkmeister, much-vaunted former Spring Creek Basin herd manager from about 1990 to about 2000, will be involved closely with the roundup. Wayne is currently the Grand Junction Field Office’s associate field manager, so knows and works closely with Jim. The acting manager/district ranger of the Dolores Public Lands Office/Dolores District is Connie Clementson – also coming from the Grand Junction Field Office. Her insights about the ponds in Spring Creek Basin mirrored my own uneducated thoughts, and I’m also glad to have her involved with the office and this roundup. And of course, Tom Rice, associate manager/deputy district ranger of the Dolores Public Lands Office/Dolores District, will be in charge of the overall roundup/adoption activities. We haven’t known him long, but he has proved caring and capable, and we are thankful to be working with him.

Those folks and more attended the basin tour almost two weeks ago, along with two of our NMA/CO board members (plus me, la presidente) and two other members of Disappointment Wild Bunch Partners. Another thing that I particularly want people to be aware of is that our group(s) is working specifically and directly with BLM – as they are welcoming our knowledge – to make this roundup as smooth-running and safe as possible. Following the precedent(s) set by Friends of the Mustangs (Little Book Cliffs), Pryor Mountain Wild Mustang Center (Pryor Mountain) and Friends Of A Legacy (McCullough Peaks) – at least – so is Disappointment Wild Bunch Partners (National Mustang Association/Colorado, Four Corners Back Country Horsemen, Mesa Verde Back Country Horsemen and San Juan Mountains Association) working with BLM to ensure the long-term protection of the Spring Creek Basin herd of wild horses.

Our biggest accomplishment to date is the coming implementation of an annual PZP darting program in Spring Creek Basin – along the lines of the programs in place in the above-mentioned herds.

Warning: Here’s where I might start to get a little preachy: If you think wild horses – particularly those on particularly small, fenced, finite parcels of dry, dusty, wind-blown geography with poor vegetation and even poorer water quality and quantity – should be “left alone,” please think about it again – and rationally. Not just one elderly, poor-condition horse starves from lack of forage and/or water – they all do. Not just one part of an originally-poor range suffers the effects of overgrazing and erosion – it all does. The horses are in great condition, with no need to remove some? Would you instead wish the roundup on horses in poor condition – as was the case in 2007, with nearly 120 horses on the range – some of which were apparently so desperate for water and/or forage that they pushed through/over fences in search of those things necessary to their survival? Would you instead wish an “emergency roundup” on even more horses, say, 130 – as was the case in the 1990s, when the horses were so stressed by lack of forage that the added stress of a roundup killed many of them? Wayne is haunted by that. I am haunted by his telling.

Our groups have worked – intensely and often with massive frustration – since early 2008 to effect change for the Spring Creek Basin herd (and NMA/CO and 4CBCH have been working much longer than that). Sustainable management is not unattainable. It does take work – and preparation. We couldn’t accomplish all we set out to do (mineral bait trapping was high on our list) … but now that IS high on the list – BLM’s list. Roundups are costly, high-profile affairs that don’t often produce “good” news. With our help, the Dolores Public Lands Office is saying it wants sustainable management for the Spring Creek Basin herd – and it’s willing to accept the help we offer to get there.

That, my friends, is progress.

And with every start and stop along the loop, horses here, horses there, we proved it – and BLM, by their very presence and invitation to us a reaching out, proved it back.

I will relate one particular incident that I believe captured BLM’s attention. Early in the morning, before anyone else arrived, a helicopter flew low over the basin. I was visiting with Grey/Traveler’s band, who were napping under trees near the road in the north hills. When the sound of the helicopter reached us, the horses bolted. That’s something I can tell people … but until they see it for themselves …

Early in the tour, an hour and a half or so later, we were standing above Spring Creek Canyon and the trapsite when the helicopter flew back over the basin. Low enough to see, comment on.

About midway through the tour, we paused in the east pocket to look out at Bounce’s band … and Grey’s. While our caravan was stopped. Grey’s took off running again. “Do you think they’re running because of us?” No, no, it must be the proximity of Bounce’s band. Bounce’s band was much closer to Grey than we were – both bands at a considerable distance from us on the road.

Other horses were on the old (and now illegal) WSA road past Sorrel Flats – Iya and Cougar with Poco and Roach. When we drove on, Grey’s appeared around the back side of the “tree island.” Hmm. Because of us? Because of the line of vehicles (four, including my Jeep)? Surely not. I’ve never seen him do such a thing (though I must say I’m almost never in the company of other vehicles, let alone three others). We got stopped at an arroyo; Grey’s kept running south.

Down past the double ponds, up onto the S saddle that returns the view of the rest of the basin … and there they were again – still running. And I finally had to admit it was us – and the helicopter. On they went toward Round Top. Not a comfortable view of the basin’s most famous stallion and his family. (The next day, I finally saw his band as I was leaving – they were all the way over on the west side of Flat Top. I know these descriptions won’t mean much to most of you, but the point is that his band traveled an enormous distance, and though they didn’t run at the sight of me, they were still moving …)

Does that change my mind about the coming roundup? No. In fact, it hardens me to the necessity of it. Because without a roundup this year, when the horses are in good condition, we’d have one next year, when they’d probably NOT be in such good condition (and back in the 120-130 population range) – and what good would that be for THEM or for the range? And without starting a program to limit reproduction among the basin’s mares, we’d see this scenario play out again in just another few years – like it has all the previous times. And THAT is what I am trying to prevent: helicopters chasing horses and families being torn apart with frequent regularity.

Little Book Cliffs STOPPED its roundup because of its program to limit reproduction. Spring Creek Basin can – will – do the same. And in the future, mineral bait trapping is an effective way to selectively remove horses that, because of the lengthy period between roundups, will hopefully come to have a particular market.

The preliminary EA states: “Population modeling reflects that the implementation of fertility control and selective removal would result in slightly reduced growth rates of the wild horse population in the Spring Creek Basin HMA, when compared to selective removal alone. The model indicates that growth rates would not be so low as to cause risk to the population should fertility control be implemented. …” It goes on to compare native PZP and PZP-22 with no real understanding of the actual differences of the two outcomes – as demonstrated by studies of both native PZP and of PZP-22. It also seems to forget that native PZP has been in use far longer than BLM has been using it – and working to great efficacy … definitely greater than the “model” used for this EA.

Fertility control – in the form of native PZP (and, eventually, mineral bait trapping to selectively remove fewer horses) – can actually quite effectively reduce the growth rate of the wild horse population in Spring Creek Basin – compared or not with “selective removal,” which in this case isn’t particularly selective at all, requiring the helicopter-driven capture of most of the horses to make good choices about who to remove and who to leave to carry on the herd’s legacy. PZP darting and mineral bait trapping, therefore, can drive a sustainable management goal of less-frequent roundups as well as the removal of fewer horses – becoming the preferred management process for BLM’s Wild Horse & Burro Program, and we are optimistically involved in helping that dream become a reality.

Relationships between civilian advocates and BLM can be and are proving successful. On behalf of NMA/CO and the Wild Bunch, I am thankful to our local government officials who think so, too.





BLM seeks comments on Piceance-East Douglas Roundup EA

19 07 2011

Thanks to photographer Pam Nickoles for this heads-up about the environmental assessment now out for comment about the upcoming Piceance-East Douglas roundup scheduled for Sept. 20-30 (just after the one here in Spring Creek Basin, which is set for Sept. 15-18). She has been visiting this herd and has some awesome photos of these beautiful mustangs.

From the BLM website:

July 7, 2011

Contact: Tom Alvarez, public affairs specialist, (970) 244-3097

Environmental Assessment for Piceance-East Douglas Wild Horse Gather Available for Public Comment

Meeker, Colo. — The Bureau of Land Management, Northwest District, White River Field Office (WRFO) is releasing a preliminary Environmental Assessment (EA) for the Piceance-East Douglas Herd Management Area Wild Horse Gather Plan for public review and comment. The gather is needed to help balance wild horse populations with other resources, restrict wild horses from areas where they were not “presently found” at the passage of the Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act and to manage wild horses within the area designated for long-term wild horse management.

The WRFO manages wild horses within the 190,130 acre Piceance-East Douglas Herd Management Area (HMA), located in Rio Blanco County, Colorado. The Appropriate Management Level (AML) in the HMA is 135-235 wild horses. The Proposed Action analyzes the impacts of gathering the current estimated population of 382 wild horses from inside and 78 wild horses from outside the HMA; to implement fertility control, sex ratio adjustments, and a selective removal of excess wild horses. If the Proposed Action is fully successful, the HMA will consist of approximately 135 wild horses; the lower range of the appropriate management level of 135 to 235 wild horses. The BLM would select the 135 wild horses to maintain a diverse age structure, herd character, body type (conformation) and implement a sex ratio adjustment of 60 percent studs to 40 percent mares. All mares, over two years of age, released back to the HMA would be treated with Porcine Zona Pellucida (PZP) immunocontraception (fertility) drugs. In addition, the BLM has fully analyzed three additional alternatives to the Proposed Action to address issues and concerns brought forward during the initial scoping process.

“The Bureau of Land Management is tasked with managing our rangelands for a variety of uses. Providing management for a healthy wild horse herd within the HMA so the thriving natural ecological balance is maintained for all plant and animal species on that range, in conjunction with all other resource uses, it is one of our most important responsibilities to the American public and public land users. The public’s participation in this analysis process is vital to the decision making process,” said Kent Walter, field manager for the White River Field Office.

The gather EA can be found on the BLM WRFO website at http://www.blm.gov/co/st/en/fo/wrfo/piceance_-_east_douglas.html, and selecting Preliminary Environmental Assessment DOI-BLM-CO-110-2011-0058-EA. All comments must be submitted in writing and received by the WRFO by the close of business on Aug. 8, 2011. Comments may be sent via email to mkindall@blm.gov with “Wild Horse Removal Plan” in the subject line of the email. Comments can also be sent by regular mail to the Bureau of Land Management, White River Field Office: attention Melissa Kindall, 220 E. Market St., Meeker, CO 81641. For more information, call James Roberts at (970) 878-3873 or Melissa Kindall at (970) 878-3842.

*********************************************************************

I went looking for information about the specific fertility control to be used … “two-year PZP contraceptive vaccine,” according to the EA, but the language seems to mean native PZP and/or PZP-22 interchangeably. (Page 94 of the PDF; Page 85 of the EA document.)

It seems odd that BLM would continue to use PZP-22 given the known timing problems from the HSUS studies in Sand Wash Basin and Cedar Mountains – and the EA acknowledges that it is best given between November and February (though I’ve also heard between December and March, and I think the Spring Creek Basin preliminary roundup EA pegs it at between December and February). This roundup is scheduled immediately after the Spring Creek Basin roundup.

PZP-22 is not “fairly inexpensive”; PZP-22 was about $200 a dose when it was allegedly administered to the Spring Creek Basin mares in 2007. Native PZP, however, is quite inexpensive – less than $30 per dose. Also, PZP-22 can be given “in the field” if that means at the roundup … but not (yet, that I know of) without a roundup – like native PZP can be given. The efficacy percentages are attributed to Dr. Kirkpatrick, who works with native PZP (and percentages are low for native PZP, which has at least an average 90 percent efficacy rate – also, native PZP is effective for one year, so the rest of that would seem to be moot)). Dr. Turner, attributed elsewhere, works with PZP-22.

Just some “hmms” I had when reading that part of the EA. I am not familiar with this herd at all and plan to seek more information from people who know those horses and that area.





Down to the wire

10 07 2011

Comments on our preliminary EA for this fall’s roundup are due tomorrow – Monday, July 11. Comments from this preliminary document will form the basis of the final EA. If nothing else, and if you haven’t already, please send comments in support of “Alternative 1 – proposed action: Helicopter drive trap and capture up to 60 wild horses in order to remove 50 excess animals. Apply the contraceptive porcine zona pellucida (PZP) with annual boosters over the next five years, and establish a 60% male sex ratio.”

Cinch

Details: Mail to Tom Rice, BLM Associate Field Office Manager, 27501 Highway 184, Dolores, CO 81323, or email to trice@blm.gov. For more information, call Tom Rice at (970) 882-6843. Comments are most helpful if they are specific to Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area and to the proposed gather activities described in the Alternatives section of the EA. Comments received in response to this solicitation, including names and addresses, will be part of the public record.

Hacho & Maiku

We have worked hard – almost four years, since the last roundup in 2007 – to get to this point. Is there more work to do? Of course there is – management has goals, but good management has no end point – it evolves. Right now, this is the next step on the path to sustainable management for the mustangs of Spring Creek Basin. Do we wish bait trapping was being used over the helicopter? Of course we do. We worked on that, and for a variety of reasons, that plan did not come to fruition for this roundup. We’re also working on the gender skewing issue. Sixty percent stallions is actually better than it was after 2007 – and now we know the exact makeup of the herd to ensure it’s no more than that.

Whisper & Aurora

But annual PZP darting is a huge, integral part of the new management plan – and that IS being implemented at this roundup. This is a giant step, and it represents numerous steps in a process that at times has been massively frustrating, and it heralds a valuable new partnership between our advocacy groups (National Mustang Association/Colorado, Four Corners Back Country Horsemen, Mesa Verde Back Country Horsemen – as individual groups and collectively as Disappointment Wild Bunch Partners (which also includes San Juan Mountains Association)) and the Dolores Public Lands Office, managing agency for Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area. Representative volunteers from these groups will be actively involved at both the roundup and adoption.

To clarify some concerns I’ve heard from people: We are NOT using PZP-22 here again; we are using native PZP, delivered annually via dart. No stallions will be returned to the basin as geldings. Cattle grazing in the basin is NOT part of the current EA – which pertains to the roundup only.

Sustainable management means managing wild horses in the wild. Doing that means reducing population growth. The means to do that is within reach. Please support Alternative 1.

Varoujan






Preliminary roundup EA – comments due Monday

8 07 2011

A reminder that comments for the preliminary EA for the scheduled roundup this fall of Spring Creek Basin are due Monday, July 11.

Here’s a link to my previously posted thoughts about this preliminary EA and a request for folks to get their comments in. Again, this roundup and the removal of some horses IS necessary this year. Visitors can attest to how dry it is in the basin, and we’re nearing capacity for what this range can sustain in numbers of horses. Please support “Alternative 1 – Proposed Action: Helicopter drive trap and capture up to 60 wild horses in order to remove 50 excess animals. Apply the contraceptive porcine zona pellucida (PZP) with annual boosters over the next five years, and establish a 60% male sex ratio.”

https://springcreekwild.wordpress.com/2011/06/28/thoughts-on-the-preliminary-ea-for-scb-roundup/





Thoughts on the preliminary EA for SCB roundup

28 06 2011

With less than two weeks before comments are due for the preliminary EA for the Spring Creek Basin roundup this fall, some thoughts.

First, here’s the link to the preliminary EA.

And here is information about where to send your comments.

I’ve been reading over the preliminary EA for our roundup this fall, and our groups (National Mustang Association/Colorado, Four Corners Back Country Horsemen and Mesa Verde Back Country Horsemen – singularly, and collectively as Disappointment Wild Bunch Partners) propose to support “Alternative 1 – Proposed Action: Helicopter drive trap and capture up to 60 wild horses in order to remove 50 excess animals. Apply the contraceptive porcine zona pellucida (PZP) with annual boosters over the next five years, and establish a 60% male sex ratio.”

A roundup IS necessary in Spring Creek Basin with the attendant removal of some horses for the benefit of the herd as a whole and for the finite, fenced environment on which they depend.

Notice that this preliminary EA is for the roundup, not specifically and/or separately for fertility control. I/we thought that was coming in a combined EA, but that’s apparently not the case. The fertility control EA will have to be much more complete – along the lines of the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range Fertility Control Environmental Assessment, but there are some things that need to be addressed in the roundup preliminary EA as presented.

Some of my concerns about our preliminary EA:

* Application of PZP: All the mares will need to be treated with primer this fall (primer, not “primary”), not just the mares captured and released. Hopefully, that’s just an oversight in this prelim EA because I’ve been talking about that all along. Also, I wonder when the number of mares to be “treated” fell from 10 to five? This has never been discussed with us by BLM. Note, it’s still “10” on the roundup schedule, even though the number of horses to be captured/removed varies between this preliminary EA (round up 60/remove 50) and the roundup schedule (round up 65/remove 45) – and has changed from the original roundup schedule (round up 90/remove 60). I was never sure where the number 10 came from originally (in fact, this was the first glimmer we had that BLM was planning fertility control here), and I’m making the possibly erroneous assumption that that’s the number of mares BLM thinks to give the booster (as opposed to the primer … but given the information about PZP, the EA writer is unfamiliar with PZP at all) … The point is, that number from BLM is premature; no one knows the post-roundup makeup of the herd or number of total mares, and there is no herd manager or approved fertility control plan in place to dictate for certain one way or another. As it says about gender skewing in this preliminary EA: “It is impossible to determine the sex ratio of captured horses until the gather takes place.” (Page 12, third full paragraph) It also is impossible to determine the number of mares to be boostered (or even given the primer) until the roundup is complete and the number of horses and makeup of the herd is known. But to implement the program, it is necessary to treat all the mares with the primer. They get it just once in their lifetimes, but they have to get it before the booster can be given the first time. The primer needs to be given even if the mare will not be boostered next spring. In the future, we will have a seasonal application plan of boostering selected mares in the late winter/early spring and giving primer doses in the fall to maturing fillies. NMA/CO will pay for the PZP (primer and booster doses) for the first five years. This should not be a problem, and it should not have been overlooked in this preliminary EA.

* Low range of AML: This preliminary EA continually mentions taking the population back to the bottom range of the AML – 35 (AML is 35 to 65 adult horses). We also have repeatedly argued against that, especially with the implementation of an annual PZP darting program. Based on the precedent in Spring Creek Basin of leaving 43 horses after the last roundup and the PMWHR statement that their “Decision Record” states “The population will not be taken to the low range of AML when fertility control is utilized” (top of Page 3), I’d like to see that acknowledged here, especially with the continuation of gender skewing. Even with gender skewing (apparently even less than this prelim EA proposes – gender skewing was said to be 55% stallions/45% mares post-2007 roundup and is planned to be 60% stallions/40% mares this fall), and the PZP-22 that was administered to the released mares in 2007 not working (it worked on one mare; two of the original five have since died), and the introduction of three mares (from Sand Wash Basin, for their genetics) between the last roundup and currently (and three foals produced by two of the mares), we still went four years before a roundup. There’s no rational reason to remove more horses than necessary given BLM’s troubled Wild Horse & Burro Program and all the horses in holding. In fact, rational reason dictates managing horses in the wild as much as possible and appropriate – as is the case here. So our suggestion is for BLM to leave 40-45 horses after this roundup, in conjunction with the annual PZP darting and their 60/40 gender skew. We do not plan to contest the gender skewing – partly because I think it will fall on deaf ears and so it’s not a battle worth fighting at this time, and partly because, if we are given enough time and not hampered in our ability to prove the efficacy of PZP here, it should naturally skew back to normal (and I’m curious enough to see that happen).

* Modeled population growth: Also, I’m disappointed that BLM’s “Win Equus” model of population growth and this preliminary EA seem to present a token use of PZP rather than making full use of it in a plan of sustainable management that will actually save BLM money and labor and us horses. This preliminary EA suggests status quo (even with the use of PZP and gender skewing): the continuation of roundups every few years – three per 10 years (2011, 2016 and, presumably, 2021) – as was done in 2001, 2005 and 2007. Why? Just five years between this roundup and the next? Why? My proposal shows that it’s possible to reduce roundups here from three per decade to one – with all the attendant cost savings, in roundups (lack thereof; this would amount to at least $150,000 in savings per decade in roundups NOT held), and horses going to holding (lack thereof; this is by far the biggest savings over time, at least $2 million saved in horses NOT removed and sent to holding during the decade). So BLM is already anticipating that PZP won’t work? Or that it won’t use the PZP well enough to be as beneficial as it could be? With a roundup in 2011, the next anticipated roundup (by BLM) – indicated by this preliminary EA – will be in 2016 (Page 31) and, presumably, one to follow in 2021, that’s three per decade – exactly what we’re trying to prevent.

Again, reviewing some precedents to the above issues: In 2007, BLM left 43 horses (remember, low end of the AML is 35). Pryor Mountain, in its fertility control EA (which, again, we do NOT yet have here …), says that when PZP is used, the herd population does NOT need to be reduced to the low end of the AML. Mention is made in our EA (Page 12) that it is “impossible to determine the sex ratio of captured horses until the gather takes place.” By all logic, it also is impossible to know how many mares to treat post-roundup with PZP – other than with primer, and this number should be “all.” 😉

A concern raised specifically by our Colorado chapter of the National Mustang Association is the lack of mention of our group’s longtime role in advocating for these particular mustangs – about 15 years’ worth.

On page 41, the preliminary EA states: “The Four Corners Back Country Horsemen has helped obtain horse counts in the Spring Creek Basin HMA for several consecutive years (I believe this is at least 12 years). They also have been consulted regarding the proposed gather and subsequent local adoption. Some members have expressed an interest in observing the gather but none have expressed any specific concerns relative to the gather or the adoption.”

I guess I can’t speak for 4CBCH, but NMA/CO and MVBCH have expressed concerns – members of both our groups made comments at the public hearing. Not mentioned? Why? Also, although 4CBCH has, indeed, conducted counts all these years, BLM has not very often taken their counts into account. Case in point: In February 2007, a flyover was conducted during which two BLM personnel (the then-current herd area manager and the previous herd area manager) counted horses. They each (separately, we were told) observed “97 horses.” In May that year, during their annual count, 4CBCH counted about 120 horses. Based on my knowledge of the 2007 roundup and subsequent documents and my own documentation, there were between 110 and 120 horses in the herd. Based on the numbers in this preliminary EA we’re now discussing, there were at least 118 horses present in the herd pre-roundup 2007. 4CBCH just about nailed it – but was discounted.

In the paragraph above the aforementioned, it states: “A local wild horse advocacy group the Disappointment Wild Bunch [Partners] (affiliated with the Colorado Chapter of the National Mustang Association (NMA)), has worked closely with BLM on several projects and have been consulted regarding both the proposed gather and the adoption planned immediately afterward at the Montezuma County Fairgrounds. In ” (One wonders what got cut out …)

Correctly, NMA/CO is one of the represented groups that make up Disappointment Wild Bunch Partners. Each group holds equal representation as a stakeholder in the welfare and well-being of the Spring Creek Basin wild horse herd. NMA/CO was formed at the request of a former BLM herd area manager (surprise?) and is the longest-serving advocate of the Spring Creek Basin herd.

Also, no mention is made of the specific, extensive documentation project conducted (by yours truly) that enables – finally – a sustainable management plan for this herd – and would allow for NOT BRANDING PZP-treated mares. This hasn’t been mentioned, but it’s a lingering concern. NMA/CO, 4CBCH and MVBCH have been the foundation and support of the documentation work I’ve been able to do to reach this point. Nationwide, BLM hasn’t been able to figure out a sustainable management plan in 40 years (euthanization, sterilization, tens of thousands of horses in holding, more being rounded up, HMAs and HAs zeroed out/reduced in size … need I say more?!) – though some individual herds have and are on that path (Little Book Cliffs, Pryor Mountain, McCullough Peaks). Now we have been able to, in less than three years, hand BLM a sustainable management plan on a silver platter. We had hoped bait trapping would be the method of this roundup … but that’s another story … and it’s likely coming in the future.

I’m extremely proud of the accomplishments we’ve made, and I’m cautiously optimistic for the future (I say that a lot; it has been a frustrating journey in many ways). We have a lot more work to do, but we’re here, we’re obviously not going away, and we will continue to advocate for the sustainable future of our Spring Creek Basin mustangs.

Again, with any questions, please contact me by leaving a comment or email me at mtbgrrl (at) fone (dot) net. If you’re a long-time reader of this blog and enjoyer of these mustangs, you are aware of most of the unique components of this herd and how/why we’ve arrived at this point. If not, I’ll be happy to explain some of the “back story” in more detail. Thank you with all appreciation for your support of our Spring Creek Basin mustangs.





Oppose sterilization

24 06 2011

Sterilizing wild horses is NOT management. BLM has apparently “reconsidered” spaying mares in two Wyoming herds (White Mountain and Little Colorado) but plans to continue with the gelding of stallions.

No, no and NO.

http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/6931/t/0/blastContent.jsp?email_blast_KEY=1168526

Why BLM in general *won’t* come up with sustainable management plans is beyond me. It talks about that often enough. In fact, we’ve effected change here by showing local BLM just how workable sustainable management can be. In 40 years, things have gone from bad to worse with these hare-brained ideas apparently designed to allow BLM to do little to nothing about their responsibility to wild horses and burros AND the American public for whom mustangs and burros are managed. And yet, when I talk about fertility control in the form of REVERSIBLE PZP, people invariably ask: “Why don’t they just geld the stallions and return them?”

* Horribly invasive.

* Horses must be rounded up and captured to do it.

* Horses must (?!) be held in corrals while they heal.

* Complications?? One of the introduced Spring Creek Basin stallions (three were introduced in the late 1980s or so) was later removed to a sanctuary, where he was gelded … and bled out … How often does this happen insanitary conditions? In a temporary pen full of other horses in dusty range conditions …??

* If I wanted to see a pasture – no matter the size – of geldings, I’d take a drive up the road to see ranch horses. Talk about upsetting the natural dynamic of wild and free-roaming (as much as possible) horses.

In contrast, fertility control such as PZP is reversible. By its use, we’re not trying to stop population growth, just limit it to sustainable levels. Periodic removals will still occur but with less frequency and hopefully on a much smaller scale than currently. While I fully appreciate that annual darting is not feasible or even possible in many large areas, where it IS, it should be used.

As adamantly as I support limiting population growth, I am adamantly opposed to stopping it altogether.





Scoping reminder

3 05 2011

This is what I need for myself – a reminder that we’re still in the scoping period ahead of the fall roundup for Spring Creek Basin.

To keep our current scoping process in front of people and continue to ask for your help to help us help the horses, I’m reposting links to the scoping request out now from the Dolores Public Lands Office ahead of our fall roundup. Send comments to Tom Rice, Associate Field Manager, Dolores Public Lands Office, 29211 Highway 184, Dolores, CO  81323. Comments, due May 12, may also be sent via email to trice@blm.gov

We want to make the roundup as gentle and safe for the horses as possible, and we also want to encourage BLM to implement an annual darting program with native PZP using volunteer darters. In the future, we want BLM to use bait trapping over helicopter-driven roundups. This is a win-win situation that will present a longer interval between roundups – and hopefully fewer horses at those times, hopefully create a little bit of a market for our Spring Creek Basin mustangs that are removed and ensure the herd’s sustainability long into the future – and present the most humane way possible to reduce numbers of horses to preserve the overall herd and the range the horses depend on for survival. It also encourages a necessary partnership between our advocate groups and BLM to share in the responsibilities of managing OUR herd.

To all of you who have sent your comments, thank you, thank you, thank you on behalf of our Spring Creek Basin mustangs.

This is the link to my post about points to make in your comments:

https://springcreekwild.wordpress.com/2011/04/10/scoping-comments-points-to-make/

This is the link to the scoping letter itself:

https://springcreekwild.wordpress.com/2011/04/08/scoping-is-out/