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round-up testimonial

Sand Wash, CO, Oct. 17-18, 2008

By Carol Walker (courtesy of the American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign - www.wildhorsepreservation.org

AWHPC note: this round-up was conducted by the same contractor as the one that was exposed in our 2006 Utah report. He is one of BLM’s two primary round-up contractors. His practice of setting up a trap without any holding pens and of running the horses directly into a horse trailer was denounced at the time. This new report makes it apparent BLM has ignored our concerns and continues to fail to enforce humane handling procedures.

photo of wild horses running on the range

photo of wild horses being herded towards a netted run by a helicopter

I was there for the Sand Wash roundup “media day” and nothing out of the ordinary happened on that day, other than the terror that the horses show while being pushed and herded by a helicopter, then forcibly separated from their families.

photo of wild horses being herded into a capture area

The day after “media day”, the trap was moved to a different location. There was an area that the horses were driven into, then they were driven into a smaller pen, then driven through a very narrow passage between two panels to a horse trailer. When the two wrecks seen in the photos happened, they had groups of over 15 horses that were totally panicked - they were driving them waving flags and yelling; it was far too large a group of horses to be pushed through such a small passage. Both times, horses went up and over and fell, crushed by other horses.

photo of wild horses that have just been captured in holding pensanother photo of wild horses newly captured in holding pen

photo of wild horses falling and trampling each other while being forced into a trailer

photo of wild horses trampling each other while being chuted into a trailer

photo of a wild horse getting stuck between the rails of the chute they are being forced into

photo of wild horses trampling each other

In the case of the second wreck, the grey mare went up, over, and fell down and was trapped partially under the trailer, while the other terrified horses ran over her head and body. The cowboys stood there doing nothing for at least 5 minutes, then it took over 15 minutes while the other horses were standing on and walking over this mare's head and body before she could get up very shakily. Then they drove her into the trailer.

photo of wild horses panicking in a chute

photo of wild horses piling up on each other in a chute

photo of wild horses starting to fall under each other in a chute

photo of wild horses falling in a chute

photo of a wild horse getting trampled in a chute

photo of a couple of wild horses falling and getting trampled in a chute

photo of a wild horse that has fallen and is stuck under a truck at the end of the chute

photo  close-up of wild horse stuck under a trailer

After this happened, the cowboys worked much more slowly and drove the horses into the trailer in smaller groups – yes, this was very preventable and the only reason for it was carelessness and a lack of concern for the welfare of the horses.

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