Reel Cowboys
Home
Online Store
Go to the OFFICIAL Silver Spur Awards Show website
Search the Reel Cowbys Website
Search the Reel Cowbys Website
Monthly Newsletter
Join the Reel Cowboys
Reel Cowboy Members
Premium Members
Social Media
Calendar
Photo Gallery
Video Library
The Cowboy Code
Fundraising Campaigns
About Us
Friends of the Reel Cowboys
Contact the Reel Cowboys
Vol. 4 - No.03 March, 2022 Nooseletter Home SUBMIT AN ARTICLE
 
Opinion: Wild Horse Not Being
Treated Fairly by BLM, Ranchers
This opinion column was submitted by Craig C. Downer, a wildlife ecologist and fourth-generation Nevadan.

Re: "Opinion: Nevada rangeland unsustainable without wild horse roundups," Jan. 27"
Specch Given to the Child Help Organization The recent opinion column by Dennis Golden is full of hyperbole and bias as concerns the wild horses, livestock and other presences on our public lands, both in Nevada and throughout the West. Golden presents a lopsided view that exaggerates the wild horses and their impacts while ignoring the much greater impacts and relative proportions of domestic cattle and sheep operations and other resource exploiters.

Here are some basic facts that give greater perspective. According to BLM statistics as of March 1, 2020, given a census of 51,528 wild horses and burros in Nevada on a total of 22,890,624 original 1971 Herd Area acres, and given their reduction through oft-suspect ways to 15,668,201 Herd Management Area acres, there would be 444 Herd Area acres — or 304 Herd Management Area acres — per individual wild equid. (Remember, a burro only requires about half the forage/water of a horse.) This sparse density is not an overpopulation, especially when we consider the millions of cattle and sheep that the Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service and other agencies permit to graze and water in Nevada.

Obviously, Golden does not care to be fair in this regard and also in regard to the additional major exploiters of public land forage, water, soils, minerals, gas, oil, etc. These include big-game interests, giant open-pit mines, fracking, damaging off-highway vehicles, land “developers” and others who deplete water tables, etc.

More: Nevada groups file suit to halt wild horse roundups as BLM ramps up efforts in 2022
BLM’s high Appropriate Management Level for Nevada is only 12,811 wild horses and burros. This is equivalent to an outrageous 1,787 Herd Area acres, or 1,223 Herd Management Area acres, per individual wild equid — a grievous mockery of the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act! This unanimously passed act stipulated that the legal lands of the wild horses and burros would be “devoted principally” to the horses’ and burros’ welfare and benefit, not that of ranchers and every other resource exploiter that shows up to demand its “pound of flesh.” Furthermore, the wild horses and burros should be treated as returned native wildlife species that complement and enhance a great majority of the other native species of plants and animals with whom they co-evolved for many thousands — even millions of years. And they are urgently needed for this today!

In conclusion, the so-called “overpopulation” accusation that Golden and other wild horse enemies continually throw at these innocent animals is a convenient but false claim that aims to appease the true overexploiters of public lands, their natural ecosystems and their “resources.” Now, at the 50th Anniversary of the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act, we should be cutting back on livestock and other ecosystem disrupters and despoilers within the legal BLM Herd Areas/Herd Management Areas as well as the U.S. Forest Service territories. We should be restoring wild horses and burros to truly thriving and genetically viable population levels — and restoring their original habitats to be commensurate with truly long-term viable interbreeding population numbers that are not drugged but rather part of a Reserve Design approach to their conservation. We should be doing this, but the perverse “Path Forward” policy is currently reducing our nation’s national heritage wild equids and their legal habitats to dangerously low, inadequate “token” levels that subvert the noble intention of the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act.

Both horse and burro possess deeply rooted ancestries in Nevada and North America, contribute in many positive and unique ways to ecosystem balance, health and resilience, especially in relation to certain overly promoted ruminant herbivores. They also greatly combat global warming through reduction of dry flammable vegetation and superior carbon sequestration. They mitigate and even prevent catastrophic wildfires. They are harmonious and healing presences whose special and intrinsic beauty enhances all precious life on Earth.
About the Author
Craig Downer is a wildlife ecologist with an M.S. from UNR who has observed, studied, written and defended wild horses and burros as well as endangered Andean Tapirs. He is a fourth-generation Nevadan and heads the Andean Tapir Fund / Wild Horse and Burro Fund. He is the author of the book "The Wild Horse Conspiracy."
Written by Craig C. Downer of the Reno Gazette Journal
Back
Call 818-395-5020 for more information
click on the image for a larger version
Go to the dbaPATRIOT website
Go to the OFFICIAL website
The Reel Cowboys of Hollywood

In Memory of the Founder of the Reel Cowboys, Jack 'J.C.' Iversen
In Memory
of the Founder

Join the Reel Cowboys on Facebook
 
 
 
 
emo


 
Get Your Memorbilia From Various Silver Spur Award Shows
 
The Reel Cowboys of Hollywood
Montoya's Betrayal Information
The Reel Cowboys Salute Our Military
 
Home | About Us | Board of Directors | Members | Join | Calendar | News | Memorial | Products | Contact Us | Membership Dues
 
The Reel Cowboys © - All Rights Reserved.
The Reel Cowboys: Dedicated to  unique American tradition - the Western film
501 (c)3: 95-2161173