Showing posts with label Wild Horse Adoption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wild Horse Adoption. Show all posts

Monday, November 29, 2010

BLM Announces North Hills and Sulphur Wild Horse Gathers

Photo Courtesy BLM

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) plans to begin removing excess wild horses from the North Hills Wild Horse Management Plan Area (WHMPA) near Enterprise, Utah, and the Sulphur Herd Management Area (HMA) near Milford, Utah, in December.

“These two gathers will help us maintain healthy conditions for the wildhorses on the range.” said Acting Cedar City Field Office Manager Randy Trujillo. “By taking additional fertility control measures, these gathers should also allow us to extend the time before we need to conduct another gather to remove excess wild horses.”

The BLM will begin gathering approximately 210 horses in the North Hills WHMPA on December 2. The WHMPA includes the North Hills HMA, which includes about 49,900 acres of BLM-administered, state and private lands in Iron and Washington counties, as well as the United States Forest Service (USFS) North Hills Wild Horse Territory, which covers approximately 24,029 acres. The Appropriate Management Level (AML) established for the North Hills WHMPA is a population range of 40-60 wild horses. The current estimated population of wild horses within the WHMPA, based on a count completed in January, is estimated at 250 wild horses.

The BLM will also gather additional wild horses from the North Hills that will be released back into the area after the mares are treated with a fertility control vaccine to slow population growth.

Members of the public are welcome to view operations once they begin. The BLM is planning to provide public observation of gather operations daily so long as the safety of the animals, staff, and observers is not jeopardized and operations are not disrupted. Those interested in participating in an escorted tour during the North Hills gather must meet at 6:00 a.m. at the Sinclair gas station at the junction of Highways 18 and 219 east of Enterprise. Current plans call for the North Hills gather to operate December 2 through 6, although weather conditions may affect the projected schedule. Participants must provide their own transportation, water and lunches. The BLM recommends that the public dress for harsh field conditions. Binoculars are strongly recommended.

The BLM plans to gather approximately 250 wild horses from the Sulphur HMA beginning December 13, 2010. The majority of these horses, approximately 220 animals, will be released back to the range following the gather. Of these, about 90 would be mares vaccinated with a fertility control vaccine to slow population growth. The Sulphur HMA covers approximately 265,676 acres of public, state and private lands, located in Beaver, Iron, and Millard counties. The AML for the HMA is 165 to 250 wild horses. The current estimated population of wild horses within the Sulphur HMA is 276.

AML is determined through land-use planning efforts that involve public participation, vegetation inventories and allocation of forage in terms of animal unit months; the BLM determines the appropriate number of wild horses that each HMA can support in balance with other uses of and resources on public land. Planning efforts include an inventory and the monitoring of all uses of the public rangelands.

Members of the public are also welcome to view operations on the Sulphur gather. Those interested in participating in an escorted tour must meet at 6:00 a.m. MST at the Border Inn located in Baker, NV on the Utah-Nevada border on U.S. Highway 6 and 50. Current plans call for the Sulphur gather to operate December 13 through 20, although weather conditions may affect the projected schedule. “Animals removed from the North Hills and Sulphur areas will be available for adoption through the BLM Wild Horse and Burro Adoption Program,” Trujillo said.

Horses from the North Hills WHMPA will be shipped to the Central Utah Correctional Facility in Gunnison and horses gathered from the Sulphur HMA will be shipped to the Delta Wild Horse Corrals.

Animals that are not adopted will be cared for in long-term pastures, where they retain their “wild” status and protection under the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act. The BLM does not send any horses to slaughter. The gather and impacts are described and analyzed in the North Hills WHMPA

Wild Horse Gather Plan Final Environmental Assessment (EA) and the Sulphur Wild Horse HMA Capture, Treat and Release Plan Final EA. The EAs and the Decision Records are posted on the BLM website at www.blm.gov/ut. The BLM also will provide updates and information at the same web address on a regular basis throughout the course of the gather.

To learn more about the program or to obtain an adoption application, visit the BLM National Wild Horse and Burro website at http://www.wildhorseandburro.blm.gov/ .

The BLM manages more land - more than 245 million acres - than any other Federal agency. This land, known as the National System of Public Lands, is primarily located in 12 Western states, including Alaska. The Bureau, with a budget of about $1 billion, also administers 700 million acres of sub-surface mineral estate throughout the nation. The BLM's multiple-use mission is to sustain the health and productivity of the public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations. The Bureau accomplishes this by managing such activities as outdoor recreation, livestock grazing, mineral development, and energy production, and by conserving natural, historical, cultural, and other resources on public lands.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

BLM Issues Decision for Conger Complex Wild Horse Gather


Fillmore, Utah—The Bureau of Land Management’s Fillmore Field Office today issued a decision to remove excess wild horses from the Conger Complex Herd Management Area (HMA) near Garrison, Utah, to protect range conditions and wild horses. The Conger Complex HMA consists of the Conger and Confusion Mountain HMAs.

“The current population of wild horses in the Conger Complex is far above the number the range can handle,” said Field Office Manager Mike Gates. “Our horses are healthy and we want them to remain healthy. We must manage the population at appropriate levels to maintain an ecological balance on the range.”

Beginning in Sept. 2010, the BLM plans to gather and remove an estimated 480 wild horses for placement in the adoption program or long-term pastures. An estimated 50 studs of the captured wild horses from the Confusion Mountain HMA will be returned to the range to adjust the sex ratio and slow population growth. Up to 30 of the Conger Mountain HMA wild horses will be released (about 20 studs of the captured wild horses will be returned to the range to adjust the sex ratio and slow population growth and about 10 mares will be treated with fertility control and returned to the range). This will bring the population of horses to appropriate management levels established through the Warm Springs and House Range Resource Management Plans.

The Confusion Mountain HMA is located in Juab and Millard Counties 30 miles north of Garrison, Utah, and encompasses approximately 293,000 acres, with a current population estimated at 368 wild horses (based on a Feb. 2010 population inventory). The Appropriate Management Level (AML) for the Confusion Mountain HMA has been established at 70-115 wild horses. This means that 250 horses will need to be removed during the gather to achieve AML.

The Conger HMA is located in Millard County 20 miles northeast of Garrison, Utah, and encompasses approximately 170,000 acres, with a current population estimated at 291 wild horses (based on a Feb. 2010 population inventory). The AML for the Conger HMA has been established at 40-80 wild horses. This means that 230 horses will need to be removed during the gather to achieve AML.

AML is determined through land-use planning efforts that involve public participation, vegetation inventories and allocation of forage in terms of animal unit months; the BLM determines the appropriate number of wild horses and burros that each Herd Management Area can support in balance with other uses of and resources on public land. Planning efforts include an inventory and the monitoring of all uses of the public rangelands. “Animals removed from the HMA will be available for adoption through the BLM Wild Horse and Burro Adoption Program,” Gates said.

Those that are not adopted will be cared for in long-term pastures, where they retain their “wild” status and protection under the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act. The BLM does not send any horses to slaughter.

More details on the gather and opportunities for public visitation will be available soon from the BLM. The gather and impacts are described and analyzed in the Conger Mountain Complex Wild Horse Gather Plan Final Environmental Assessment (EA). The EA and the Decision Record are posted on the BLM website at www.blm.gov/ut . The BLM also will provide updates and information at the same web address on a regular basis throughout the course of the gather.

To learn more about the program or to obtain an adoption application, visit the BLM National Wild Horse and Burro website at http://www.wildhorseandburro.blm.gov/ .

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

BLM to Host Public Hearing for 2010-2011 Utah Wild Horse Gathers



Photo Courtesy BLM

Salt Lake City, Utah The BLM Utah will host a public hearing at the West Desert District Office to discuss the use of helicopters and motorized vehicles in the management of wild horses and burros on Utah’s public lands. The hearing will be held on, June 9 at 6:30 p.m., at 2370 South 2300 West, Salt Lake City, Utah. An annual public hearing for comments on this issue is required by federal regulation. The Salt Lake City hearing will be the only one held this year in Utah.

“Using helicopters and other advanced equipment is crucial in our efficiency and maintaining safety in wild horse management,” said Jared Redington, Salt Lake Wild Horse and Burro Facility Manager. “We have found the use of helicopters is the most humane method in gathering horses from the open range and remote mountain areas where they live.”

Utah’s current wild horse population is about 2,700. Drought conditions and increased wild horse numbers cause limited forage and water availability, which reduces the number of animals that can be supported on the land. BLM Utah gathers an average of 300-400 horses annually from public lands to help control horse populations. Horse populations can increase 15 to 25 percent every year.

BLM and its contractors plan to start gathering excess wild horses from various herd areas across the state in August. Gather locations may change due to available funding, water and forage conditions or wildfires. Herd areas scheduled for wild horse population reduction include: Winter Ridge (Unitah County), Confusion and Conger (Millard and Juab Counties), Sulphur (Iron and Millard Counties), North Hills (Iron and Washington Counties), and Chokecherry and Mt.Elinor (Beaver and Iron Counties).

The BLM has removed more than 14,000 wild horses and 500 burros from Utah’s rangelands since government round-ups began in 1975. More than 6,700 of these wild horses and burros have been adopted locally, and the remainder was sent east for adoption. Adoptions are set for Cedar City and SpanishmFork in August. Daily adoptions are ongoing at the Delta Wild Horse andmBurro Facility and the Salt Lake Regional Wild Horse and Burro Center nearmHerriman. Monthly adoptions are held on the first Tuesday of each month June 1 through Sept. 7, at the Central Utah Correctional Facility in Gunnison.

For additional information about the upcoming public hearing contact Jared Redington at (801) 561-4632, or the BLM Utah State Office at (801) 539-4057. For information on future wild horse and burro adoptions, visit http://www.ut.blm.gov/  , or contact the Delta Wild Horse and Burro Facility 435-864-4068, 600 N. 350 W., Delta, Utah, or the Salt Lake Wild Horse and Burro Center 877-224-3956, 8605 W. 12600 S., Herriman, Utah.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

4th Annual “Tribute To a Wild Born Legacy” and Mustang Adoption Saturday April 17th, 2010

Heber City, UT (March 30, 2010) There are few horses more expressive, sensitive and hardy than America’s wild-born Mustangs. To promote awareness and education on the versatility and trainability of Mustangs, the Intermountain Wild Horse and Burro Advisors (IWHBA) and Sage Creek Equestrian of Heber City, UT will host the 4th Annual “Tribute to a Wild Born Legacy” on Saturday, April 17th, 2010.

This year’s event will feature a demonstration by two inmates from the Gunnison Prison Wild Horse Program. These inmates will be working with two Mustangs available for adoption, demonstrating the work they do preparing Mustangs for adoption. Attendees will be able to participate in a question answer session with representatives of the program. The demonstration will be at 2:00pm.

Janet Tipton of IWHBA (http://www.iwhba.org/ ) says, “This event will offer everyone an opportunity to see Mustangs up close and learn more about the extraordinary possibilities that these beautiful horses can bring to people’s lives. It’s also a fantastic educational event where anyone can see and learn more about horsemanship skills that work well with wild-born Mustangs.”

Six, adoptable Mustangs will be available for free viewing from 9:00am to 5:00pm. These six horses will all be at various stages ofstarting, from halter broke to started under saddle. Viewing of the adoptable horses is free to the public. The adoption will be through a silent auction process that will run from 9:00am to 5:00pm.

Beginning at 6:00 pm, IWHBA will host a buffet dinner and live entertainment featuring Singer/Musician Cary Hobbs and live Mustang performances. Horse Trainer Jim Hicks and Wild Horse Specialist Cliff Tipton will both be performing each with one of the adoptable mustangs.

Tickets for the dinner are $25.00 per plate. Proceeds from the event go to benefit the Intermountain Wild Horse and Burro Association, which is a fully volunteer-based and non-profit organization.

Educational horsemanship clinics featuring BLM Mustangs and nationally-known horsemen will be held from 9:00am to 5:00pm. Wild Horse Specialist Cliff Tipton, who finished 17th out of 100 in the 2007 “Extreme Mustang Makeover” competition, will conduct a Environmental Sensory Solutions clinic at 10:00 am.

Well-known trainer and clinician, Jim Hicks, will conduct a Colt Starting Clinic at 12:00pm. Jim’s approach to Compassionate Leadership with the Horse will be demonstrated with a BLM Mustang that will be offered through Saturday’s adoption. The Gunnison Prison Wild Horse Program demonstration will follow at 2:00pm. Clinics are $20.00 in advance (http://www.iwhba.org/ ) and $25.00 at the door.

For tickets, or more information about this event or Mustangs, go to http://www.iwhba.org/  or contact Janet Tipton 801-554-4431, or the BLM-Utah State Office, Wild Horse & Burro Program, 440 West 200 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 (801)539-4057.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Mountain Valley Extreme Mustang Makeover



Just wanted to invite everyone to the Mountain Valley Extreme Mustang Makeover next weekend on Nov 7 at Heber City. There are 29 really nice horses that are wonderfully trained and will be competing for up to $10,000 in prize money!

All events will take place on Saturday Nov. 7th at the Wasatch County Events Center

$5.00 - 8 AM - All horses will complete the Body Condition judging and

Obstacle/Riding Course
$25.00 - 2 PM - Top 10 horses will perform in a Freestyle competition!

FREE! - 4 PM - All horses will be available for adoption

Or pay $25 and watch all day!