A federal law was unanimously passed in 1971 to save the land where they were “presently found” for the “principal use” of the wild equids living there. Since that time, more than 40% of that land has been taken away from them... to appease cattle ranchers and developers. [Got beef?]
Image from 2021 Wild Horse roundup in Idaho
Government agencies have been eliminating wild horses and burros
from their legally mandated public lands for decades. Now, 122 wild
horses have been forcibly removed from their home in Colorado
through a new cruel method.
A federal law was unanimously passed in 1971 to save the land where
they were “presently found” for the “principal use” of the wild
equids living there. Since that time, more than 40% of that land has
been taken away from them.
Image from September 2023 roundup
near Rangely, Colorado
The West Douglas wild horse herd near Rangely, Colorado, existed long before the 1971 Act was passed. Yet, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) removed the West Douglas area from its legally mandated range status and has been trying to remove all the wild horses there for years. Each time they do a roundup in West Douglas, the goal is to “zero out” the wild horses. The last attempt before this year was in 2021 when 457 horses were captured. They were sent to a holding facility in Cañon City, where at least 146 horses died from an easily preventable disease because the BLM’s own protocol wasn’t followed and they weren’t vaccinated.
The BLM says its reason for eradicating wild horses from West Douglas is that the area is “unsuitable” for horses. Yet, thousands of privately “owned” and exploited cattle graze West Douglas before being shipped off to slaughterhouses and all of this is subsidized by taxpayers. The fact is that horses are native and evolved on the North American continent and are far better adapted to thrive on western ranges than the introduced cattle (whose ancestors were unwillingly brought over from Europe by cattle ranchers).
Image from September 2023 roundup
near Rangely, Colorado
Image from September 2023 roundup
near Rangely, Colorado
The latest roundup in West Douglas this September again claimed to
“zero out” the wild horses there. However, as in past roundups, the
BLM admits that the 122 captured horses were not all of them. Tyrell
Turner, a BLM wild horse and burro specialist for northwest
Colorado, said, “We think there’s still horses left… We didn’t catch
all of them.”
All helicopter roundups of wild equids are brutal, with resulting
injuries, some lethal. This September’s West Douglas roundup had a
method that we haven’t seen before. In recent roundups across the
American West, the BLM has been denounced by advocates for not
following their own Comprehensive Animal Welfare Program (CAWP)
standards by chasing the horses too fast and leaving babies behind.
CAWP requires that the helicopters not go faster than the slowest
horse in a group.
Our friend, Toni Napolitano, was a public observer at the September
West Douglas roundup. She reported, “The BLM contractors loaded
cowboys and saddle horses into horse trailers and sent them out on
the range and out of sight of observers. There, the cowboys roped
foals and put them in trailers by themselves. The helicopter chased
their mothers and families for miles, frantically without their
foals, eventually running the family into the trap. As an observer,
it was incredibly distressing to watch these babies by themselves
while realizing their frightened, terrorized mothers were being
chased without their foals.”
Toni and the other advocate observers realized this abnormal method
was meant to circumvent CAWP so that the family bands could be
chased faster over the incredibly rough and rocky range. We must
continue to work hard to protect and save America’s wild equids.
Image from September 2023 roundup
near Rangely, Colorado