Saturday, August 10, 2013
Welcome to Palomino Valley, where Free Spirits Go to Die
Dear Readers, I'll post my own notes and opinion soon. Until then, I want to share Monika Courtney's editorial with you. Monika is an elfin Swiss woman, now a resident of Colorado, who stands up for the wild horses. Best, Terri
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Palomino Valley captives grieve over filly dead of "unexplained causes" in 105 degree heat |
August 9,
2013 11:20 am
By Monika
Courtney, Evergreen, Colo.
Was the
quick organizing of a BLM workshop in Reno a courteous act or another PR stunt
– pulling a hand brake on bad publicity pertaining to animal cruelty at Palomino
Valley government holding facility?
I fear it is
the latter.
The
workshop’s structure defined biased control, a la Delphi style. Time restraints
and biased input by “experts” recruited by BLM, rendering opinions rather than
integral advice on current lack of shelter in higher climatic heat trends…
reflected disregard for horses and us.
Despite Joan
Guilfoyle’s (Division Chief) welcome gospel of “engaging with public”, most
left with a sense of non-accomplishment.
You may see
a shade going up over the sick pen, the sole objective of PhD, UC Davis
recruits insisting on lack of shade studies on wild horses, therefore
forfeiting the benefits thereof to the confined, suffering equines in their
care. They even claimed shade increases insects, when the contrary is pointed
out by reputable equine veterinarian experts.
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BLM's barren Palomino Valley Wild Horse Center as seen from the air. |
These vet
recommendations, shelter/heat stress /nutritional info, NWS weather charts,
photos of wild horses in shade on the range were submitted. Common sense of
roof structures as they have over hay stacks but none for horses does not
exist. It is dispelled with biased scholar magic geared to halt public pressure
of increasingly concerned tax payers. Moreover, sequester excuses garnish the agenda.
While monies are allocated to continued “emergency” round ups to stockpile more
horses, non-existing “shade research on wild horses” is discussed to deter from
the goal.
The neglect
is real. 7 inch long curled duck feet hooves of limping horses in the “trim”
pen (just when?), foals baking, the suffering and inhumanity are a disturbing
whopper to digest. Anyone in doubt, take a trip to PVC.
The ghostly
broken spirits trapped onto 160 acres of hell are prisoners of a self-serving
agency, demonizing them since decades. With a self-inflicted crisis, the budget
pie is off the rocker as tax funds go to round ups, holding, and administrative
overhead. Little to none is given to welfare or more sensible on the range
management.
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On the range, these hooves would be trimmed by volcanic rock |
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Neglect may render this mustang lame & she may be destroyed |
The one size
fits all quick fix scriptures of BLM, evicting more horses as I type, causes
unspeakable suffering. Yet, BLM creates horse mills resembling feedlots, with
absence of modernity and wellbeing to animals, which would label any private
person a sadist.
The saddest
chapter in this book of misery is that those in charge are outlandishly
detached. Federal guidelines to holding do not currently exist– but agony and
suffering. Policy handbooks with strict quality care to be implemented are
needed now. Life on the range, as the 1971 Act intended, with mustangs’
contribution to the balance of the eco-system where they also help prevent
wildfires, seems to be a science BLM is not willing to consider.
Surely, life
in the wild is more humane than the equine concentration camps and death pens.
Thinking of the pleading horses I met at Palomino Valley… I think they would
agree.
Labels: dead foal, Monika Courtney, Palomino Valley, wild horses
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Posted by
Terri Farley @ 12:54 PM
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