I at first want to thank the 100′s of people who stopped by our booth at the Spruce Meadows X-mas Fair.  The interest shown by so many about the plight of our wild horses was inspirational to say the least.  It was an amazing two weekends, with a record number of calendars being sold.  We also ran out of our 1000 brochures due to the interest shown.   I also want to thank all of you who took a few moments, when you got home, to e-mail Diana McQueen the Minister in charge of the wild horses, requesting that she not authorize a 2012/13 capture season.  In that regards, the Minister still has not made any decision in regards to this matter.  The report drawn up by an independent company, with input from all stakeholders including WHOAS, is still being reviewed by the ESRD.  Before being made public, those of us that had input will be able to review it to assure that our information is accurate.  The whole purpose of this report and study is to come up with a viable management strategy for the wild horses.  WHOAS still strongly believes that with the past two years of capturing over 300 head of wild horses and with the toll that this spring took of the wild horse foals, no season is necessary.  We also believe that our management strategy would assure that no more wild horses would have to go for slaughter as in the past.

Wildrose MLA Joe Anglin, with the help of a couple of WHOAS members has put together a paper to present in the legislature.  He was to have had the opportunity to do this on Wednesday, November 28/12, however due to events within the legislature he was unable.  It is still hoped that his paper, calling for the wild horses to be designated a Heritage Species and given proper protection, will be introduced shortly.

As for the horses themselves, I am finding again that they all appear to be in excellent shape despite the fact that it has been a very cold November with a good amount of snow already accumulating in wild horse country.  Hunting season is at the end and soon the back country will settle down, allowing all the creatures to also settle down.

Pretty one

At this time of the year the foals are looking so good, as you can see with this pretty girl.  There is lots of forage and so unless the snows get overwhelming, the horses along with the other wildlife should be able to survive the hardships that the cold and snow of winter bring.  Some of the mares are already showing signs of being in foal.  It is still amazing to me that these wild horse mares will do everything they can to survive and produce a healthy foal in the spring time.  Sometimes when you first see them with their new born in the spring, they look so rough and are so skinny, yet in a few weeks of good grass they have bounced back and the family does just fine.

I encourage all of you to keep up your e-mail and letter campaign to the Minister, urging her to forgo a capture season this year.  Without this I believe that too much damage to the horses will be done in regards to sustainable numbers.   Here is her contact information:

Minister Diana McQueen

204 Legislature Building

10800 – 97 Ave

Edmonton, AB   T5K 2B6

Email: draytonvalley.devon@assembly.ab.ca

In the years that I have spent studying the wild horses I have spent countless hours researching the history of our first nations people and our early explorers and settlers.  Some of  my most recent research has found information that supports the fact that maybe the wild horses did not disappear from North America.  Interesting!  I will be updating the website and adding some new pages with one of them being this research and the history of the horse in Alberta and there will be also one on wild horse behaviour.  I do hope to have these ready soon.

Thank you again for all your support.

Bob.

 

10 Responses to “November’s Moments”

You have a great webside and I hope I can do my very best for the wildhorses in British Columbia. We are now creating a society and hope we can join activities and infos!
Kind regards
Kiki

Those horse should be left a lone their not hurting anybody. They have rights like everybody else.

Thank you for all the great work of WHOAS to help stop the endless slaughter of these beautiful wild horses. They are so majestic, and I can not imagine why this is being allowed. This year we had the great fortune to witness some of these horses around Sundre. I wish Canadians could see what a tragedy it is to allow the capture of these horses. We are allowing a heritage to disappear before our eyes. The horses deserve to live their life without disturbance. I find the capture appalling. More people have to speak out against this.

Just watched your interview on Global Calgary- great job with your cause. I hope all Albertans can support you and the majestic wild horses that live on this land.

This story goes to show how the ignorance of man has spanned all boundaries!
These horses are already adapted to the environment of Alberta.
They should be let alone to grow and flourish.
It disgusts me to think that they will be rounded up for slaughter.
They will only be run out of there environment after a few years anyway due to the growing corruption of the oilfields.
Let them roam in peace for as long as they can.

They call them invasive but what happens when they wipe them all out. do they not think that it will affect the whole environment in a worse way.

I don’t understand, if they insist on capturing the wild horses to keep the population down in the wild, why not adopt them out to people for a fee instead of shipping them off to slaugter? Oh, right, ’cause it’s all a money grab and it’s just easier that way. I know I personally would love to have a wildie to train because they have got to have the best hooves and conformation around. And the smarts. Perfect trail and mountain mounts IMO.

And, really, they belong here as much as we people do. I’ve been told that they aren’t native and are disrupting the system and blah, blah, blah. Tosh is what I say. We aren’t native either. we came over the same time the horses did. I think they have as much right here as everyone else.

I just want to say these horses are the most beautiful animals we have ever seen.
We first saw them in the summer of 2010 while camping at Nordegg.
They should be allowed to live free as all other animals in the area.
Keep up the good work.

Shame on Albertans for sending these animals to slaughter
they are the heritage that Alberta grew on, only when they are totally gone will everyone then recognize the mistake that was made. Yes, I am a horse owner and lover, and strongly oppose the manner in which the horses are culled. Maybe gelding a few of the stallions would reduce the population of spring foals….this is our heritage…please don’t throw it away. I was not born in Alberta, to me this is what I perceive the west to be.

Just a couple of questions. Lots of people are calling these horses “feral”. That means a horse that was once domesticated, that has now gone wild. I would think that number would be quite low, and certainly and foals born from a feral horse, would now be wild naturally. Also is there any proof that some of those horses are feral, ie. brands, etc.?
Also, do the cattle ranchers have to buy a licence to graze their cattle on Crown lands? If they do, is it possible to obtain a licence to graze the horses, and perhaps that would be a way to stop the killing and round-ups?
Just curious, as I’d certainly like to see them remain.

Thanks

VF

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