Background

7 01 2016

Corona

Corona is looking healthy and relaxed in the late afternoon.

Corona

Her visitors also were very calm and peaceful.

What? You don’t see them??

Elk in Spring Creek Basin.

Let’s zoom in.

It’s hard to estimate their numbers, but they may have been over AML. πŸ™‚

There were quite a few more than shown in this image as the herd stretched out across one of the upper hillsides above Spring Creek canyon. The basin is a welcome wintering ground for mule deer and elk. When the snow in the high(er) country is very deep, these animals become our close neighbors again. After the pressures of hunting season, we’re happy to welcome them!





‘PZP: Where hope, science and mustangs meet’

6 01 2016

Thanks to Kat Wilder for her Writers on the Range op-ed in High Country News. πŸ™‚

It’s getting harder and harder to deny PZP and its success!

Houdini

This is Houdini, who, at best guess, is somewhere north of 25 years old. She shows her age but otherwise looks great. She has contributed her genetics to Spring Creek Basin and has daughters and granddaughters and grandsons (at least) still wild in Spring Creek Basin.

I’ve known at least two elder mares that have had foals in the spring and died that fall, leaving their weanlings as orphans. Houdini has contributed her genetics and deserves a long, healthy lifeΒ  as the wild, wise mustang mare she is, adding her knowledge to the whole herd.

PZP makes that possible.





Girls in blue

5 01 2016

Alegre and Houdini

The light on these grey girls is so warm, even as the shadows on the snow make it look so blue and cold. Alegre and Houdini are rarely far from each other.





Pretty in white

4 01 2016

Shane and cloud-shrouded La Sal Mountains.

Ah, another peaceful sunny day in Spring Creek Basin, looking toward Shane and Utah. As it happened, it was the first day of a new year, and it was spent with many more mustangs. πŸ™‚ It was an amazing blessing of a day!





Light and bay

3 01 2016

Kwana and Duke

Kwana and Duke in the last light of the first day of the year. How handsome are those faces!





Sundance with a sundog

2 01 2016

Sundance and sundog!

Does it get any more gorgeous on the very first day of the very New Year?!

Sundance rocked the sundog that appeared over Spring Creek Basin late in the afternoon of January the very 1st, 20SIXTEEN! (Can you believe it?!)

From Wikipedia: β€œSun dogs are a member of a large family of halos, created by light interacting with ice crystals in the atmosphere. Sun dogs typically appear as two subtly colored patches of light to the left and right of the sun, approximately 22Β° distant and at the same elevation above the horizon as the sun. They can be seen anywhere in the world during any season, but they are not always obvious or bright. Sun dogs are best seen and are most conspicuous when the sun is close to the horizon.”

I’d add that they’re also best seen while highlighting fabulous mustangs. πŸ™‚

Houdini and Alegre under New Year's Day's sundog!

Oh em wonderful-gee. πŸ™‚ What a beautiful day, the first of the rest of the year!





Welcome, 2016!

1 01 2016

Spring Creek Basin

Looking forward. πŸ™‚

As Prairie Girl said in her comments yesterday, never give up fighting for those you love. We pray for peace, and we will be active in making it happen for our beloved horses.

For our mesteΓ±os, we are motivated by love and gratitude.





Happy New Year’s Eve!

31 12 2015

Comanche

Looking back on 2015, we had many successes offset by many seeming failures for wild horses and burros in America. But if those failures gave us lessons with which to succeed in 2016 and beyond, we owe it to our mustangs and burros to pony up and succeed.

It’s possible. Our Spring Creek Basin mustangs are beautiful, living proof that perseverance and commitment *can* bring about our desired goals.

So, looking back on 2015, we focus on those successes with gratitude and with commitment to carry forward lessons learned.

From the horses:

  • Honor, protect, cherish family.
  • Live in the moment.
  • Bite once, make your point, graze peacefully.
  • Play!
  • Be curious. Explore.
  • Be wary of danger, but don’t panic.

What lessons have you learned from YOUR horses? Please share! πŸ™‚ And enjoy the last moments of 2015!





Serenade

30 12 2015

Terra

Coyotes were singing back and forth as the snow rolled in again. While the mustangs seem to ignore the canines most of the time, this particular time, they seemed very aware of the caroling and who was doing it.





Warmth

29 12 2015

Gaia

Pretty Gaia in her warm copper coat. The stark white snow seems to make their colors so much warmer and richer this time of year.