
Skywalker, walkin’ on Earth – a pretty beautiful slice of Earth, pretty close to heaven.
McKenna Peak and Temple Butte in the background.

Skywalker, walkin’ on Earth – a pretty beautiful slice of Earth, pretty close to heaven.
McKenna Peak and Temple Butte in the background.

Tesora makes her home range look gorgeous. That’s Brumley Point in the near background and Temple Butte in the far background.

Spirit and Puzzle make sunset against Temple Butte gorgeous.

Happy birthday this beautiful day to devoted mustang advocate Pat Amthor, who, with her husband, Frank, works tirelessly to better the lives of our Spring Creek Basin mustangs!

This was supposed to be a post of joy and beauty, a snapshot memory from an exceptional day of mustangs and friends and mustang friends.
Then I found out that every National Advisory Board member *except* Ginger Kathrens, who has spent more than two decades fighting for the protection and good management of America’s wild horses and burros, voted to KILL 45,000 equines that have been rounded up and removed from their home ranges and now are held in government holding pens and pastures – all because of four decades of mismanagement by BLM.
That is not merciful euthanasia, as Carol Walker has said. Plain and simple, it is mass execution, mass slaughter, mass murder.
Even the thought and encouragement of such a thing is deplorable and despicable, and completely impossible to comprehend. A few years ago, when this was first proposed, it was learned that BLM already was planning counseling for the people it would task to go in and kill all those healthy animals. …
The good news is that BLM stopped the terrible mare-sterilization experiments it had proposed in partnership with Oregon State University. A terrific victory!
And in the style of one step forward, 100 back, BLM now gets most of its “advisory” board to encourage the slaughter of 45,000 wild equines.
Deep, deep thanks to Ginger Kathrens for continuing to stand up for the responsible and humane management and protection of America’s wild horse and burro herds.
To the rest of that “board” … what the outrageous hell are you thinking?????????????????????
Links:
http://www.thecloudfoundation.org/news/press-releases
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This was the post I had planned …
This view comes to you courtesy of a marvelous day at the end of August. Spent with friends and mustangs in one of the most beautiful places on Earth (look at that scene and feel free to argue!?), it was a dreamy day set right smack dab in reality.
While sitting at the top of the world (the rimrock ledges that form the basin’s western boundary), it was another day during which I felt blessedly grateful for all the wonders of life, so richly expressed here in Spring Creek Basin.
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… Now … my heart cries …

If these awesome folks look familiar, they should. They returned to Spring Creek Basin recently to install the water trough below the basin’s second catchment.

In that first photo, they’re celebrating because this trough – shown filling with water – now is full of water for Spring Creek Basin’s mustangs. 🙂
Ginormous thanks to (top photo, left to right) Justin Hunt (BLM range tech), Pat Amthor (4CBCH), Kat Wilder (advocate), Frank Amthor (4CBCH), Garth Nelson (BLM range specialist) and Carol Capps (4CBCH)! Our mustangs have even more water, thanks to you all!

Another scene that needs no words.

Most days, I still feel Pati Temple watching over us. The mustangs must feel her gentle protection, too … especially when it comes in the form of life-giving rain. 🙂

Sometimes the world is too beautiful for words.

We live in a beautiful, beautiful, wild world.