For
the past 5 years, I’ve been photographing herds of wild horses
living on public land in Central Idaho, managed by the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM).
On
July 27, 2009, I photographed a round-up of what is known as the Challis
herd. For years, I’ve seen photos and footage of “gathers” (BLM's
politically correct term for round-ups)... horses running for their
lives, being chased by helicopters, and pushed into holding pens. Nothing
I’d heard or seen up until now could have prepared me for what
I’ve just witnessed.
Watch the video
My
friends and I hiked to a ridge near the “operation.” In
sweltering heat, we watched the helicopter chase herds of horses, family
bands as small as 4 and as large as 30, from beyond the horizon, up and
down mountains at full speed. Horses slick with sweat, some foals less
than a month old struggling to keep up, separated from their mothers...
In
the most disturbing part of an already distressing day, we watched
the helicopter keep after a stallion that ran off from his herd and
up over a ridge. The pilot stayed on top of this horse for at least
15 minutes, so close to the ground that the horse was kicking up at
the helicopter.
Finally,
ready to collapse, the horse gave up, and the wranglers roped him and
brought him in. Having personally witnessed and photographed this incident,
I saw no reason why anyone would spend American taxpayers' money, so
badly needed elsewhere, on the fuel and helicopter time it took to
chase this one horse so relentlessly.
Despite
warnings by the landowner before the round-up started, the same pilot
flew over private property, two days in a row, and removed horses that
had made their home on a local preserve for the past 7 years.
It
may be too late for this herd. They are already being sorted and shipped
to sale destinations — tightly-knit families broken up, yearlings
separated from their bands, proud stallions losing their families… intricate
social structures, which I have documented year after year, crushed.
Before & After The stallion
One of many foals
Personally, I am gutted. I have come to know many of these
family bands and my heart breaks for the stress I know they are experiencing
during this unnecessary and cruel process.
I
interviewed an 87-year old rancher who has lived his life here. He
said, “There’s no
reason to take these horses off this range… there’s plenty
of feed for both horses and cattle… they weren’t hurting
anyone. This is just a bad deal and I don’t like it one bit.”
I
want to know why, with 33,000 wild
horses in government holding pens that BLM cannot afford to care for
(and proposed euthanizing last year), we are rounding up more horses
that are supposed to be protected on public land. I want the public
to know that their tax dollars are going to round up horses that were
living free on public land. And I want the horses that are not adopted
to be turned back out on the range.
They
are our wild horses, on our public land. At least they were…
Thank
you for your time,
Elissa Kline
Later
on, at the BLM corrals…
Injured horses
Young foals
Too young to be chased for so long in such
heat…
Orphan foal
I watched this foal go from one mare to another over a
period of 3 hours and never saw him connect with anyone. He appeared
bewildered, worn down by a helicopter chase and days in the holding pen.
The
herd’s homerange after the round-up…
Reproduction authorized solely for educational purposes, provided
www.wildhorsepreservation.org is credited as source.