
Rave-lita heads down the hill to a seep in the arroyo below. There’s still some snow on the north-facing slopes, but even that is going fast.

Rave-lita heads down the hill to a seep in the arroyo below. There’s still some snow on the north-facing slopes, but even that is going fast.

Comanche zeroes in on a (mild) challenger as shadows lengthen from the backside (north side) of Knife Edge.
We’re back in moderate drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. At least one pond has some water now, but in mid-February, it’s not looking so wintry out there. Some parts of Colorado are tired of snow; we in Southwest Colorado are praying for a whole lot more.

After the sun had set, Killian finally gave me a look. The very cutest look. 🙂

Yesterday morning, this scene – other than black beauty girl Shadow – was all white.
No matter that the air temperature didn’t hit the magic number of 32. That ol’ Colorado-high sunshine can melt the frostiest snow. Especially when it’s not much more than an inch-or-so dusting.

I love finding some of our pinto girls in the snow! Spirit and Puzzle have been wandering unseen for a little while, so I was ecstatic to find them, especially with McKenna Peak right behind them!

During these days of the freeze-thaw-mud cycle, trips to the basin are morning trips now. If you don’t get out early, you won’t get in the basin at all. Or, as someone found out almost the hard way the afternoon of the day I took the above pic of Mariah, you won’t get very far in, and you’ll be lucky to leave only ruts and not get stuck in the mud.

Same basic, iconic view … different day, different grey!
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As most regular readers of this humble blog know, we have worked closely and for many years with BLM managers of Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area. Our partnership is one to be envied; we have great respect for our BLM folks – especially herd manager Mike Jensen – and the health of our mustangs and the range they call home is directly because of that partnership.
We have accomplished almost everything on our big-goal to-do list for Spring Creek Basin’s mustangs, including the commitment to using bait-trapping if/when we need to remove horses in the future and our successful fertility-control program using native PZP. How successful is it? We’re celebrating our NINTH year of NO roundups and removals in Spring Creek Basin. I’d say that qualifies. 🙂
All of the things we have done and are doing – and the fact that our current one is 26 years old – means we’ve come to another big goal: updating Spring Creek Basin’s herd management area plan. Mike Jensen has been working on that for a while now, and a LOT goes into it.
So to *start* the process (see above where I note that a LOT goes into it, including time in the field doing vegetation monitoring over the last few years, archaeological-site assessments, ongoing data collection about our PZP program, etc.), we come to the scoping process for updating the herd management area plan, otherwise known as the HMAP.
Here, you will find that scoping letter on BLM’s eplanning website.
At the left side of the page, click the “Documents” link. On the next page, under “Document Name,” click the link for “Spring Creek Basin HMA Interested Parties Letter.”
At the first link, read the information (the other two links will take you directly to the page to access the document link and the comment link, and the letter itself):
“The BLM is preparing an Environmental Assessment (EA) pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended (NEPA) to analyze the proposed action and alternatives to that action.
“What: Name/Type of Proposed Project: Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area Plan (HMAP) Revision.
“Where: General and Legal: This Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area (HMA) is located within the Spring Creek Basin portion of Disappointment Valley in Southwest Colorado. The HMA is approximately 21,932 acres is size and lies within both Dolores and San Miguel Counties.
“Disturbance: Estimated Disturbance (acres/area) Description: The HMAP Revision will include the proposal for constructing two water catchment structures which will result in approximately 1.0 acres of total of ground disturbance.
“When: Expected Implementation and Duration: The Herd Management Area Plan would be implemented immediately following the issuance of the Final Decision.”
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On to the letter.
What it’s TELLING you is that Tres Rios Field Office (where Mike is employed as a rangeland management specialist and Spring Creek Basin’s herd manager) is “seeking input on a proposal to revise the 1994 Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area Plan (I just realized, on typing that, that they swapped a couple of words) for the Spring Creek Basin Wild Horse Herd Management Area in Dolores and San Miguel Counties, Colorado. …”
In addition to advising interested parties about potential disturbance of about an acre of land total for the construction of two (more) water-catchment structures, this is the stated “purpose and need” of the HMAP revision:
“The BLM is proposing to revise the 1994 Spring Creek Basin HMAP. Herd Area Management Plans (again, word swap!) identify specific management actions, goals, objectives and monitoring for managing wild horses and /or burro herds and their habitat. Therefore, the proposed HMAP revision will identify goals, objectives and monitoring to address 1) existing appropriate management level (AML) of wild horses; 2) rangeland health conditions; 3) population control measures; 4) removal criteria and gather techniques; 5) genetics; 6) population dynamics; 7) range improvements; and 8) sustaining healthy populations of wild horses.”
What it’s ASKING is for the public to offer comments about those issues along the lines of answering these basic questions:
Do you agree with those topics/issues BLM has identified?
Are there additional topics/issues you might like to see identified/addressed in the revised HMAP?
The comment deadline is Feb. 19, and as you’ll see in the letter, there are a variety of ways of delivering those comments: There’s a “Comment on Document” button on one of the pages linked above; send an email to Mike (address in the letter); send your comments via USPS mail to the office (address in the letter).
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Now some suggestions.
First of all, do we want Spring Creek Basin’s HMAP revised and updated? Yes, please! 🙂
Do we want a couple of new water-catchment structures? Yes, please!
So let’s look at each of the topics from the letter.
Regarding the disturbance expected for approximately 1 acre for the proposed construction of two water guzzlers/catchment structures: Herd manager Mike Jensen explored two potential sites with an archaeologist from Tres Rios Field Office and found no cultural resources at either site, leading to acknowledgement of both sites as good for guzzler placements. In addition to providing two additional sources of clean water for the mustangs, siting the guzzlers in those locations will help with the dispersal of the horses to currently under-used grazing areas within Spring Creek Basin.
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If you made it this far, you deserve another pic of our beauties. 🙂
Thank you for reading this far!
To reiterate a very important fact: We work very closely with Mike Jensen and our Tres Rios BLM folks for the good management of our Spring Creek Basin mustangs, and have for a very long time.
Much of that work is the fun stuff: In-the-field, boots-on-the-dry/dusty/muddy/snowy-ground, mustangs-near-and-far, under-blue-sky-in-the-great-wide-open awesomeness. Some of that work involves paper (and computer) work.
We thank you for following along with our Spring Creek Basin mustangs and for your support during these many years. If you’d take a few moments to send comments to Mike about this scoping letter, we’d sure appreciate it! If you’ve visited Spring Creek Basin and the mustangs, say so. If you know the horses and our advocacy work through this blog or elsewhere, say so. Say that these mustangs are important to you, and please say how much you appreciate BLM’s partnership with advocates on behalf of Spring Creek Basin’s mustangs.
Thank you all in advance for helping us achieve our goals for our beloved mustangs. We know how much you love them, too!


In a word, it’s a muddy, sloshy, sloppy, messy, soupy, WONDERFULLY giant mudhole out there!
OK, you can’t really see all that mud in this pic of Mariah leading her band away from a drink of water in Spring Creek (puddles, not flowing), but if you scroll down and see all the white in the previous pix, then scroll back up and see how NOT-WHITE it is in the above pic, you might get the idea. 🙂
All that white = our good mud NOW.

Two of our beautiful grey girls, Maia and Alegre, are as much icons of Spring Creek Basin as Temple Butte and McKenna Peak, seen above, rising out of the snow fog.

What a difference a day makes! Or, rather, a night. 🙂
The south wind blew snow in waves across Disappointment Valley and Spring Creek Basin on Christmas Day, but not a flake of it stuck to the warm, dry ground.
Yesterday’s photo of Temple was taken during one of those waves of snow, right before sunset. The sun already was coming back into view from beyond the clouds and snow, and you can see the brown of the basin behind the jewels of snowflakes swirling around Temple.
Then, late after the sky cleared for the stars, we had snow in the night, and we woke up to a white, white world!