Note:
despite FWS staffers’ claims to the contrary, all pictures on this
page are from the June 2006 Sheldon round-up, except for the last picture,
which is from Sheldon’s August 2005 round-up. All pictures ©
2006 F. Steffan, except as otherwise indicated.

Despite a public outcry and pleas by humane groups to at least postpone
this round-up, FWS proceeded in the summer heat, at the height of foaling
season. Even the BLM doesn’t conduct helicopter round-ups during
foaling season.

This days-old
foal is struggling to keep up with the herd.
More about him.
FWS
would not allow the public within a two-mile range of the round-up site.
Despite the secrecy, our investigators were able to document the process
up close.
“This
is not foaling season.”
– Brian Day, Refuge Manager
To
defend their plan, FWS tried to claim that somehow June is not the
height of foaling season on Sheldon.
Yet,
a 2002 report by a Sheldon Refuge biologist states that horse population
samplings on Sheldon are done no sooner than the end of July,
to wait until most of the mares have foaled. |
This
foal, drenched in sweat, looks
just a few days old. |
“We
are taking extra precautions with the foals.”
– Paul Steblein, Project Leader
Several foals
were injured, orphans separated from their mothers in the chaos. Some
mares reportedly aborted their fetuses under the stress of the round-up.
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This
foal was trampled by the herd.
Later
rescued by a couple of good Samaritans, he did not make it after
all; he died of internal injuries after about a week of intensive
care.
More
pictures of this foal. |
"If the gather does not go as planned,
I will suspend our operation.”
– Paul Steblein, Project Leader

Some foals,
exhausted by the chase and unable to follow the herd, were left hog-tied
in the desert heat for wranglers to pick up later.
Rope-burns
on young foal |
|
Others were
just lost in the chaos, left behind to fend for themselves. Wranglers
reportedly managed to locate eight of these orphan foals on Friday (the
round-up had started on Monday). Five of them were already dead. The three
survivors were taken by a good Samaritan to a veterinarian for emergency
care.

It is unknown how many others, too young to survive on
their own, died on the range. Mares could be seen in the holding pens
showing signs of recently giving birth but with their newborns unaccounted
for.

Dead foals were found, hiking distance from the Refuge
camping grounds.
FWS got nervous
and became more secretive as the process unfolded. However, a vet report by Dr. Krebs, who treated the three survivors,
confirms that these foals were left for days alone on the range.
Injured
foal from Sheldon’s August 2005 round-up
©
2005 S. Huey
|
All
along, FWS had been assuring the public that no foals had ever been
injured during one of their round-ups.
Yet
another lie, as evidenced by this picture from last year's round-up.
|
Update: On July 19, 2006, US Representative Nick Rahall wrote FWS
Director Dale Hall requesting that FWS cease and desist from any further
wild horse removals at the Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge.
Read his letter.
Read a follow-up
letter addressing the reported neglect of Sheldon horses
subsequently seized from their adopters by the Canadian police. As Canada
is a horse-slaughter hub, the mere fact that these horses were allowed
to be sent across the border in the first place is cause for grave concern.
In
May 2007, FWS issued a draft Environmental Assessment (EA) in preparation
for another round-up. See an extensive analysis of the EA and, more generally,
of the issues associated with the survival of the Sheldon herd.


Reproduction authorized solely for educational purposes, provided
www.wildhorsepreservation.org is credited as source.
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