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ANTI WILD HORSE OP-ED PIECE
This is the original op-ed composed by Judy Blunt as published in the New York Times on January 4, 2005.
Live Free and Die
By JUDY BLUNT
Missoula, Mont. - Those whose knowledge of wild
horses comes from coffee-table books and animal-rights
propaganda tend to embrace the mythology of the wild horse
and ignore the reality. The myth is pretty, like artwork: a
proud stallion and his mares and their adorable foals
gallop through a meadow, mountains in the background, manes
and tails streaming. There's a reason people who see that
take a photograph or paint a picture.
But here's some artwork from the summer of 2003: A cloud
hangs over the Nevada landscape, caused by 500 half-starved
horses pounding the high desert to powder, looking for
food, stamping any remaining waterholes into dust. The
foals are long dead, left behind as they weakened. Cowboys
under contract with the Bureau of Land Management set out
to gather the horses and move them, but a phone call
redirects them to a worse situation in another area.
The overpopulation of wild horses is a serious problem in
the West, with herds growing exponentially until they eat
themselves out of luck. The land can't support an infinite
number of wild horses - which, by the way, are inbred feral
descendants of imported domestic horses, hardly more native
to the prairie than the cattle their ancestors were trained
to herd.
Still, possibly because of our love for the domestic horse,
its wild cousins have become cultural icons, symbols of
freedom. It's practically un-American to talk about killing
them, so we've assumed a sort of willful blindness to both
the reality of the problem and its solutions.
Animal-advocacy groups rise in indignation over every
proposal to reduce the number of wild horses, including
sterilization programs, instead demanding a Western version
of the miracle of loaves and fishes.
Some 30 years ago, the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Buee-Roaming Horses and Burros
Act provided the land management bureau with two options
for horses removed from public lands because of
overcrowding: adoption or "humane and cost-efficient"
destruction. Ignoring the second option, the bureau has
been warehousing 16,000 horses, unlikely to be adopted but
ostensibly waiting for new homes, in overcrowded,
unsanitary and expensive feedlots. An additional 37,000
horses and burros overgraze land meant to sustain 27,000.
To get the land management bureau to come to grips with the
problem, Senator Conrad Burns, Republican of Montana, added
a provision to a spending bill last year that allows
certain horses to be auctioned off to the highest bidder,
which may be a slaughterhouse. Senator Burns's amendment,
signed last month by President Bush, may actually end up
rescuing the wild horses he is accused of murdering. At its
worst, this measure will sacrifice the unadoptable few to
the benefit of all. At its best, it will prod us, as a
nation, to take that first difficult step toward a
sustainable program to manage wild horses.
Adoption is a partial solution, but it's not the whole
answer. Adoptions don't keep up with herd growth, for one
thing. And not all horses are created equal, for another.
People adopt beautiful, young horses. The old, plain and
ugly are doomed from the outset. In addition, virtually
anyone with $125 can adopt a wild horse, but not everyone
has the knowledge and perseverance to tame it, or even, as
it turns out, to catch it after it's been let out to graze
in its new home.
Horse trainers like Merle Edsall see the worst of the
adoption cases when they're called to recapture adult
horses whose heads have grown around halters put on them as
colts. Too many, he says, spend their days in small pens
because their owners, unwilling to put them down, are at a
loss for what to do with them. His solution is the Sonora
Wild Horse Repatriation Project, which seeks to establish a
sanctuary in Mexico to sustain 10,000 horses in a natural
environment. But projects like this are howled down by
animal-rights groups that complain about sterilization and
other issues while ignoring the good such a project would
bring.
People who truly love horses need to do their own research.
We need places that will accept returned adoptees and
horses that no one wants to adopt. The Sonora project, and
several other sanctuary plans like it, would provide a
place for wild horses to live out their lives in freedom.
Game are controlled through hunting and predation; cattle
graze under strict regulations. Only the wild horse is
allowed to multiply unchecked, and with catastrophic
results. Sanctuaries would keep healthy horses out of
costly, unsanitary feedlots, while sending older,
unadoptable horses to slaughter would give their herds a
better chance at survival. A side effect would be the
rejuvenation of our depleted public lands to the benefit of
all species. Americans have a chance now to become part of
a sustainable solution before we stand guilty of loving our
wild horses to death.
Judy Blunt, a professor of creative writing at the
University of Montana, is the author of "Breaking Clean."
Judy Blunt was raised on a cattle ranch and is allied with the public lands "welfare" ranchers. Apparently because Blunt wrote a sort of Montana Version of Little House on the Prairie the NY Times editorial staff thought she had some kind of knowledge about wild horses.
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