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Public lands belong to all Americans no matter what state you live in.
Roundups are funded by all Americans no matter what state you live in.
Every remaining wild horse herd should be preserved and protected for future generations to enjoy.
Roundups are funded by all Americans no matter what state you live in.
Every remaining wild horse herd should be preserved and protected for future generations to enjoy.
Wild horse herds in wyoming are disappearing
Wyoming used to be home to 42 wild horse herds. 26 of the herds have been completely zeroed out and 8 have had the acreage and number of wild horses allowed reduced or greatly reduced.
There are just 16 wild horse herds remaining.
The Bureau of Land Management, at the request of the Rock Springs Grazing Association,
is planning to completely remove 3 more herds and reduce a fourth herd by 60%.
The Salt Wells Creek, Divide Basin, and White Mountain wild horse herds need your help. These beloved herds will soon be rounded up and every last horse in all three herds permanently removed forever. The nearby Adobe Town herd area will be reduced by 60%, with most of that herd also rounded up and permanently removed.
There are just 16 wild horse herds remaining.
The Bureau of Land Management, at the request of the Rock Springs Grazing Association,
is planning to completely remove 3 more herds and reduce a fourth herd by 60%.
The Salt Wells Creek, Divide Basin, and White Mountain wild horse herds need your help. These beloved herds will soon be rounded up and every last horse in all three herds permanently removed forever. The nearby Adobe Town herd area will be reduced by 60%, with most of that herd also rounded up and permanently removed.
Remaining wild horse herds in Wyoming:
• McCullough Peaks • Little Colorado • Fifteenmile • Antelope Hills • Green Mountain • Conant Creek* • Lost Creek • Rock Creek* • Stewart Creek • Dishpan Butte* •Crooks Mountain • Muskrat Basin* • White Mountain • Salt Wells Creek • Divide Basin • Adobe Town Red indicates the 3 herd areas BLM plans to zero out Purple indicates the herd area BLM plans to reduce by 60% in both acreage and number of wild horses |
Pink areas represent zeroed out wild horse herds in Wyoming and areas of reduced acreage; brown areas represent the few remaining herds
source: https://www.westernwatersheds.org/hma-domestic-grazing/ Zeroed out Wyoming wild horse herds include: • North Shoshone • Gold Creek • Foster Gulch/Dry Creek • Triangle • Sand Draw • Continental Peak • Zimmerman Springs • Desert • Alkali Spring Creek • La Barge • Copper Mountain • Bolton • Deer Creek • Checkerboard South • East Beaver • Flat Top • Arapaho Creek • Sand Creek East • Granger Lease • North Granger • Slate Creek • Carter Lease • Cumberland • Cyclone Rim • Doty Mountain Cherokee • Seven Lakes * BLM turned four separate herd areas into one 'Complex' and reduced the number of wild horses allowed |
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All photography on this page is copyrighted by Run Wild Images
All photography on this page is copyrighted by Run Wild Images