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| Demi keeps going to the place she started....is she trying to tell us something?? |
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| Using Benson's tail as a fly swatter. |
Demi, the sorrel pinto, first showed up at Sand Wash Basin late last fall. She was near the entrance and clearly had been "dropped off". I can confirm she was domestic by the way she came up to me to be petted! She took up with Benson and then ended up with Greasewood's band for the winter. Anyway she has made it back to Benson and where she started off. She is struggling to keep up with Benson, who probably moves at least (probably more) 10 miles a day....it is wearing her out. She is not made to withstand the brutal conditions of SWB. I have observed wild horse watchers seeing her and getting very close. Locally, Sand Wash has a reputation of being "disguarded ranch horses", which of course we know is a myth, except for this mare. I think it is bad for this herd's reputation to have Demi out there, plus it is inhumane keeping her out there when we know what is going on out on the range. Also the HSUS is spending millions trying to control the population. Well, this would be a way to remove a breeding mare. Demi likes people and would make someone a good horse.
We need to start helping these modern day mestangos. It is 2011 and we should be progressing in the way we manage the last of our herds. We should be setting up a bait station, preparing to get horses adopted out, start communicating! For the horses' sake! Between the HSUS and the public we have the knowledge to forge ahead with humane management. I have to believe we are on our way...
My only hope is that all this "data" will lead to a new way of managing wild horses. They deserve to be treated with some repect! N