My what a mess we have created! It's amazing how we can take an issue, shake it up, throw in a mess of misguided emotion, bring in the government to pass legislation prohibiting the slaughter of equine on U.S. soil, throw 100's of $MM at it ......and still the issue is unresolved and getting worse. Sheesh. This talk of sterilization is absurd...birth control not far behind. I know it feels good to attempt to find common ground and appease those who are sensitive to the issue of population management, however, once you start down this path you get lost in the "proverbial swamp".
We have allowed special interest groups and emotion to hijack what is the Fed & State responsibility to manage our lands in best interest of all.
(an aside - in 2010 I was hunting the west side of the Stillwater drainage in the Custer lands and was approached by a federal agent at my camp, he asked if I had seen any horses running loose in the back country?? I asked if a pack string had been lost, no he said, but since the 2008 crash and the legislation prohibiting horse slaughter, people had been dumping horses (no market for them at the Billings sale), told me any I horse I see with out tack is to be shot!)
In my world of simple solutions:
1. Get the FED & State re-engaged in managing the lands that have feral equine and come up with realistic plans that can be achieved in a 5 year window.
2.Remove the "no slaughter" legislation. Equine are now being sold at sale barns and loaded on trucks and shipped to Canada and Mexico. There is a viable market for horse meat.
3. Spend some of that money identifying and removing some of those horses to be trained and used as ranch, pleasure, hunting-mountain horses. Develop the market. From what I have read, those horses generally have really good feet, stamina, and make excellent working stock.
Simple solutions from a simple mind....buyer beware.
We have allowed special interest groups and emotion to hijack what is the Fed & State responsibility to manage our lands in best interest of all.
(an aside - in 2010 I was hunting the west side of the Stillwater drainage in the Custer lands and was approached by a federal agent at my camp, he asked if I had seen any horses running loose in the back country?? I asked if a pack string had been lost, no he said, but since the 2008 crash and the legislation prohibiting horse slaughter, people had been dumping horses (no market for them at the Billings sale), told me any I horse I see with out tack is to be shot!)
In my world of simple solutions:
1. Get the FED & State re-engaged in managing the lands that have feral equine and come up with realistic plans that can be achieved in a 5 year window.
2.Remove the "no slaughter" legislation. Equine are now being sold at sale barns and loaded on trucks and shipped to Canada and Mexico. There is a viable market for horse meat.
3. Spend some of that money identifying and removing some of those horses to be trained and used as ranch, pleasure, hunting-mountain horses. Develop the market. From what I have read, those horses generally have really good feet, stamina, and make excellent working stock.
Simple solutions from a simple mind....buyer beware.