
This is the stout, hunky stallion with the sabino mare and sorrel filly in the previous post.
All that hunkiness … and look at his lovely white eyelashes. 🙂 What a dreamboat! 🙂

This is the stout, hunky stallion with the sabino mare and sorrel filly in the previous post.
All that hunkiness … and look at his lovely white eyelashes. 🙂 What a dreamboat! 🙂

This pretty sabino mare and her lovely filly are with a stunning dark-grey stallion on Green Mountain.
By the time I’ve shown a number of photos of these gorgeous ponies, I’ll have run out of adjectives!

Many wild horses share something in common from range to range: Curiosity. 🙂
This youngster is with a beautiful band on Green Mountain in Wyoming.

These mule deer were more curious than worried on Green Mountain as the early morning sunshine shrugged off the clouds and found space among the trees to spotlight the lovelies.

Isn’t she lovely? You can see her eyelashes from here! (Photo taken through the window of my Jeep, from the road.)

When I think of ranges in the West where wild horses roam (as) freely (as possible), it’s hard to imagine a place so completely different from Spring Creek Basin than Pryor Mountain, which straddles the Wyoming/Montana border (drawn, of course, by human hands and machinations).
And then I visited Green Mountain, in central(ish) Wyoming.
My first visit, last year, wasn’t too crazy different, but I was, only briefly, in one very small spot of the whole herd management area. That small region of the area was wide open, and I saw a lot of horses during that visit, and of course, it made me eager for another opportunity to visit.
THIS year, blog reader and friend Prairie Girl (Lynn H.) gave me directions to a different part of the range – the top of the mountain! – saying that’s where I’d find the horses at this time of year, not down below, where they’d been the previous spring.
As it turned out, I found many more human beings (and their RVs and campers) than any four-legged wildlife (one elk cow and a handful of deer, as well as a couple of chipmunks), but in the very last place I looked (after taking in amazing (seriously – AHHH-MAZ-ING) views from the top of Green Mountain), I did finally find horses – right where Lynn had indicated on her map that there are “always” horses! 🙂
The horse pictured above is a stallion (I think), and he was with another stallion (I think). I spotted them at the edge of the trees at the edge of the road, and the above pic is the best I could get of him, from my Jeep, before he and his buddy slipped silently deeper into the forest.
It’s not easy (!) to spot horses in this amazing forested landscape (yes, this is a BLM herd management area), but it’s incredibly rewarding when it happens.
Huge thanks to Lynn for the directions and other information about finding these mustangs that are very near and dear to her!

Huge love to all mothers, whether your babies have two legs or four, all days, especially this day. 🙂
Especially, love to my mom, Nancy, who instilled in me many fine attributes … most especially, my love for horses!

These beauties are in the bay stallion’s band at Green Mountain. I got to sit on a rock for a while with them. We had a bit of sunshine before some welcome rain rolled through the area.

We’ve had our share of wind in Disappointment Valley. But it’s true what they say about that ol’ Wyoming wind. … It doesn’t seem to bother the wild ones much.

Right?

You’ll recognize this cutie from the previous post. She was very curious. And very proud of being nearly as tall as mama. (She liked to hook her chin over mama’s back.)
Mama, meanwhile, was busy with groceries. 🙂