May is Burro Awareness Month and with wild burros at critically low numbers in the U.S., we are calling for the creation of a National Wild Burro Range in Arizona, the state where over half of America’s remaining wild burros reside. The Obama Administration has the authority to designate the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Black Mountain Herd Management Area (HMA) as a wild burro range, an act that would confer greater protections to the iconic wild burros living there that are cherished by so many. The burro population in the Black Mountain HMA is perhaps the largest, most genetically healthy and robust burro population left in the U.S. Please sign the petition asking President Obama to honor the animal who is the symbol of his party by taking this action before the end of his term!
This Friday, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Sierra Front-Northwestern Great Basin Resource Advisory Council (RAC) meets in northern Nevada. This citizen advisory board provides recommendations to BLM for a public land area that includes 33 wild horse and burro Herd Management Areas (HMAs).
Today, we ask you to sign a petition urging the RAC members to recommend two ways to help wild horses and burros. Please make your voice heard.
The deadline for signing the petition is May 13, so please act today.
The U.S. Forest Service (FS) is accepting public comments on an Environmental Assessment (EA) on the proposal to re-issue a permit to graze up to 525 cow/calf pairs year round in the Sunflower Allotment, a 158,000-acre area located in f the Tonto National Forest northeast of Phoenix, Arizona. It’s been more than a decade since cattle were allowed to graze in this sensitive and fragile Sonoran Desert ecosystem, which has not yet recovered from the effects of past overgrazing. It appears that the only reason for reauthorizing grazing in the allotment is that the rancher who holds the permit is selling his ranch, and the property holds far more value if the grazing permit is reissued than if the allotment remains in non-use.
Our coalition partners at the Salt River Wild Horse Management Group are concerned about the impacts of resumed grazing in the Sunflower Allotment, especially because of the allotment’s proximity to habitat used by the unique and publicly cherished Salt River Wild Horses.
The deadline for comments is May 10, so please act today to oppose the FS plan to reauthorize cattle grazing in the Sunflower Allotment.
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is seeking comments on a plan to hire a French company to conduct “social science research” on American public attitudes and values toward wild horses and burros. It’s clear from the information provided that the BLM intends to manipulate the process to elicit a desired response in favor of the agency’s mismanagement and plans to utilize surgical sterilization of wild horses on the range as a management tool. In addition, the BLM has already solicited, received — and ignored — hundreds of thousands of public comments over the past six years on its Wild Horse and Burro Program. Now the agency wants to spend hundreds of thousands of tax dollars to collect additional public opinion through a process it can manipulate and control! The BLM is currently seeking comments on the need for and ways to enhance the value of this proposed research project…. So please get your comments in today!
Today, May 5th, we are asking you to participate in another huge and historic event for our region, the BIG Day of Giving. This event starts at midnight and goes for 24 hours. Once this starts, All About Equine Animal Rescue will join with over 500 other nonprofits to raise $5 million, engage 25,000 donors, and make our region #1 as the most generous community in the country on this national day of giving!
As many of you know, All About Equine strives to support and further our mission of rescuing, rehabilitating abused, neglected, abandoned and unwanted horses. This year, our goal is to engage at least 200 donors and raise $10,000 and with your support we hope to use the money raised to match our recent $10,000 grant award from the ASPCA. This grant will help complete facility expansions and improvements for providing adequate shelter and housing to the horses we rescue. All About Equine is also looking for a larger facility to help further our mission, educate our local community, and expand programs for our youth, as well as veterans and their families.
How you can help on May 5th:
Make a donation to All About Equine Animal Rescue at Big Day of Giving – All About Equine.
Spread the word. Tell your friends, post on Facebook, and tweet about it. This is an opportunity to be part of something really big. Help us get there.
Visit Us Today at the Veteran’s Memorial Hall (130 Placerville Drive, Placerville, CA) from 3:00PM-7:00PM. Come by and Say Hi. Giving stations will be available to donate on site.
Your donation of any amount will help feed a horse, defer the cost of veterinary care or help with other costs associated with rescuing a horse (e.g. transportion, hoof care, dental care). AAE is an all volunteer organization. $25 helps feed a horse for a week or two, $50 helps feed for a horse for nearly a month and $100 helps with feed and basic care of a horse for about a month.
Be a part of the $5 Million giving community and help us improve our community while helping our horses by joining with others on May 5th for a BIG Day of Giving! BIG DoG 2015
It is with a happy heart that I am pleased to announce that YEA! – Youth’s Equine Alliance has officially closed its doors. With the help of adults and youth nationwide we were able to accomplish some amazing things. We collected over 250,000 signatures to save horses and burros and inspired many youth to get involved in efforts to save horses and burros, wild and domestic.
Now, our youth delegate Amber Neuhauser is taking the lead to be a spokesperson for kids everywhere on how to start creating change locally and on a national platform to benefit equines. Amber will be working with Matt & Palomino Armstrong of Chilly Pepper – Miracle Mustang, Equine Rescue & More, an LRTC Rescue & Rehab Project (CPMM) to continue to bring you updates and get more youth involved in the movement.
CPMM has a wonderful impact on kids locally and nationwide through their work with critical care foals. Children are naturally enamored with foals and learning the story of each foal rescued helps teach about the various issue wild and domestic horses face. Palomino and Matt Armstrong, the mangers of CPMM, also frequently participate in demonstrations at schools and libraries to enrich local youth.
All three of YEA’s featured horses – Ikey, Mikey, and Rocky – are only alive because of the critical care they received through CPMM at the loving hands of Matt & Palomino Armstrong. For that reason, we thought it was an appropriate organization to transition our readers and supporters too.
Ikey and Mikey are now living at an 80 acre ranch. Robin and Rocky have stepped out of the public arena in order to focus on training and their future together while allowing CPMM, a federally recognized non-profit organization with similar goals to take the lead. We hope you will continue to support kids and horses through Chilly Pepper – Miracle Mustang Equine Rescue and More, an LRTC Rescue & Rehab Project and we hope you are as happy as we are that your donations will now be tax deductible.
Sincerely,
Denise DeLucia
(Former) Director of YEA!
For questions about donations received in April, please contact me directly by replying to this email. All donations have been refunded with the exception of once received via mail – those are coming back directly this week.
May is Burro Awareness Month, and with fewer than 9,000 wild burros roaming free on America’s public lands burros, there is no question thatburros are in crisis in the U.S.
Yesterday, we just learned that the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is considering a huge roundup of burros from what is probably the largest burro herd left in the country — in the Black Mountain Herd Management Area (HMA) in Arizona. Comments must be submitted by end of day tomorrow, Saturday May 2, 2015!
The Black Mountain burro population is one of the last healthy herds of wild burros in the country. Countless Americans and international tourists are aware of these burros, who are regularly encountered along Highway Route 66, and especially in the town of Oatman, Arizona. Cherished worldwide, these burros are now under the threat of a BLM roundup!
The BLM estimates the Black Mountain burro population to be over 1,500 and the agency only allows 478 burros on 574,000 acres of public lands where livestock grazing continues. It’s time to call for the BLM to designate the Black Mountain HMA as a protected “range” where the burros would receive increased protections.
This rare and historic, genetically healthy herd must be protected, not rounded up and removed by the hundreds! Please take action below to stand up for Black Mountain Burros today – the first day of Burro Awareness Month!
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is seeking public comments on its plan to roundup and remove 167 wild horses from the West Douglas Herd Area (HA) near Grand Junction, CO. If unable to capture all 167 horses from the West Douglas HA, the BLM will also round up horses in the neighboring Piceance/East Douglas Herd Management Area (HMA) in order to meet its removal quota. The BLM has been trying to “zero out” (eliminate all wild horses from) the West Douglas HA for years. Despite receiving over 8,000 public scoping comments demanding alternatives to this proposed roundup, the BLM has failed to seriously consider options for reducing livestock grazing and humanely managing wild horses with PZP birth control in this area. Your comments are needed today!
I’m sure everyone was as excited as I was to finally see trees budding and spring flowers starting to poke their heads above ground. Then Mother Nature played a cruel trick on us by following that another snow storm. Hopefully, this will be the last of it. We still have snow and ice in parts of the woods and under the manure pile. The mud is in all of its glory, and the mules wear it happily.
I want to thank everyone who took part in making our Cabin Fever Auction a success this year. Our wonderful donors provided a lot of really cool items, and you, our friends, in turn got some great stuff.
BIG thanks to Veridian folks Nigel Blake, his son Terence, and the group of folks who volunteered a Sunday to come and get a run in shed started. Many hands truly do make light work. It was a fun day and a lot got done.
I recently took in a very sad mule whom I have named Sweet William.. A wonderful friend of SYALER bailed him out from a sale barn. He was emaciated when pulled, but he has a huge, and thankfully strong and healthy heart, and is a real sweet heart. I am totally in love with this thirty year old guy. He is eating a lot as I try to put weight on him. His teeth have worn down to nubbins so he can’t properly chew hay so he gets four meals of soaked hay stretcher, MVP, and Equine Senior a day. We are going through feed like crazy, but it will be so gratifying to see him put some weight on his bony frame.
We have had a few adoptions recently, which is always nice. I love when I can help enable a “love match”. I sent a mule off to a new home with two very dear friends of mine today, which is a double treat. These friends have taught me a lot about mules and their care from a time before I was involved in rescuing these magnificent animals. I wish Johnny and Kris all the best with their new mule.
Huge thanks and heaps of gratitude to all of you who continue to support us. I love the letters and emails and phone calls from those of you who share your long ear experiences.
On April 28, 2015, Senators Mike Enzi (R-WY) and Michael Bennet (D-CO) introduced the Senate version of the National Forest Service Trail Stewardship Act of 2015 (S.1110). The bill would direct the Forest Service to take several actions to help address the current trail maintenance backlog that is adversely impacting all trail users on many national forests, including equestrians. Earlier this year, Congresswomen Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) and Tim Walz (D-MN) introduced the House version of the bill (H.R.845).
The bill was first introduced during the last Congress. The American Horse Council, Backcountry Horsemen of America, and the Wilderness Society were significantly involved in the creation of this bill.
A June 2013, study by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that the Forest Service has deferred trail maintenance needs that exceed half-billion dollars, and only one-quarter of the agency’s 158,000 miles of trails meets agency standards for maintenance. This maintenance backlog is causing access and safety issues for equestrians and all trail users on national forests.
The National Forest Service Trail Stewardship Act would direct the Forest Service to develop a strategy to more effectively utilize volunteers and partners to assist in maintaining national forest trails. It will also provide outfitters and guides the ability to perform trail maintenance activities in lieu of permit fees. Additionally, the bill would address a liability issue that has discouraged some national forests from utilizing volunteers and partner organizations to help perform trail maintenance and would direct the Forest Service to identify and prioritize specific areas with the greatest need for trail maintenance in the national forest system.
In the current fiscal environment it is unlikely Congress will appropriate additional funds to directly address the trail maintenance backlog. This bill will help improve trail maintenance without the need for additional funding.
The bill is supported by the AHC and many other recreation organizations.
Great news! This week, the federal court in Wyoming agreed with our legal arguments and dismissed the State of Wyoming’s anti-mustang lawsuit against the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). Backed by powerful ranching interests, Wyoming Governor Matt Mead waged this legal battle in an attempt to force the BLM to conduct constant roundups and removals of wild horses from public lands in the state.
This is our second major legal victory for mustangs in just over 30 days!Last month, the federal court in Nevada granted AWHPC’s motion to dismiss a similar rancher-backed lawsuit.
Thank you so much to all the AWHPC supporters who have generously contributed to our Litigation Fund. We are deeply grateful to you for giving us the resources necessary to intervene in these cases and defend America’s wild horses from these dangerous and scurrilous legal attacks.
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is accepting public comments on the Draft Resource Management Plan (RMP)/Environmental Impact Statement for the Carson City District Office. This document will set management policy for the next 10-20 years for a 4.8 million-acre public land area that includes 17 wild horse and burro Herd Management Areas (HMAs). If passed in its current form, the draft RMP would perpetuate the BLM’s unsustainable and inhumane reliance on removals of wild horses and burros from the range as its primary management approach, and will “zero out” (eliminate all horses) six HMAs. This is the stage of the BLM’s planning process where the voice of the public must be heard, so please take a moment to speak up for these wild horses and burros by clicking below!
Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) President, Steuart Pittman, discusses bridging the gap between the racing world and the riding world to benefit the Thoroughbred breed. Here he describes Thoroughbred aftercare as a three-legged stool. The first leg involves the nonprofit organizations that take in unwanted horses who are not marketable because of soundness problems, temperament problems, or low demand for riding horses in a given area. The second leg is the work of preventing horses from becoming unwanted. This includes the work of the RRP and The Jockey Club’s Thoroughbred Incentive Program. The third leg of the aftercare stool is helping racing owners connect with the riding market when they have a sound horse that is ready to retire. For this the Communication Alliance to Network Thoroughbred Ex-Racehorses (CANTER) provides a listing service for racing trainers and owners who are looking to rehome their horses. The RRP also offers an extensive “Horse Listing” page on its website featuring more than 200 horses for sale or adoption.
“So what is generally termed the ‘aftercare industry’ is really more than the literal meaning of the word ‘aftercare.’ In fact, when people hear words like ‘rescue’ and ‘aftercare,’ they assume that racing left horses in poor condition. That sentiment is not good for racing and it’s not good for efforts to market these athletes in other sports,” says Pittman.
We have just days left to get 10,000 emails to the BLM Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board to demonstrate strong public support for policies that Keep Wild Horses Wild and strong opposition to dangerous roundups and surgical sterilization on the range!
This Board is headed in the wrong direction, as evidenced by the troubling recent appointment of a veterinarian who has for several years been pushing for the BLM to perform dangerous surgical ovariectomies on wild mares.
If the pro-slaughter, pro-cattlemen members that dominate this board have their way, mares like this beautiful mustang will be in danger, as will all wild horses and burros that remain on the range and in holding!
The Board meets next week, April 22-23, 2014 – so please send your email today!
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has decided to remove Saudi Arabia from the list of countries affected with African Horse Sickness (AHS). In a March 30 announcement, the Department stated that based on its evaluation of the health status of the country, Saudi Arabia is free of AHS. USDA has determined that the importation of horses, mules, zebras, and other equids from Saudi Arabia presents a low risk of introducing AHS into the U.S. The change, which applies to both temporary and permanent entry of horses, means that horses can enter the U.S. from Saudi Arabia without undergoing a 60-day quarantine period.
AHS is a highly contagious and deadly disease that affects horses, donkeys, and mules and has a high mortality rate in naive horse populations like that in the U.S.
Under the prior rules, horses from Saudi Arabia, like horses from other countries affected with AHS, had to be quarantined for sixty days before entering the U.S. Horses from non-AHS countries may be admitted with a shorter quarantine period. The extended period is required to ensure that horses from AHS countries are not infected with AHS, which has a long incubation period.
In response to a 2009 request by Saudi Arabia to be recognized as free of AHS, USDA studied the status of the disease in that country. The USDA evaluation used information provided by Saudi Arabia and other sources. Based on its evaluation, USDA concluded that AHS was not known to be present in Saudi Arabia and that the likelihood of introducing AHS into the U.S. through imports of horses from that country was low. Last June, USDA proposed to change the federal import rules to remove Saudi Arabia from the list of countries affected by AHS and allow horses to be imported with a much shorter quarantine period.
The AHC, and several other equine associations, opposed this proposed change maintaining that the potential benefits were not sufficient to offset the potential adverse consequences.
USDA disagreed, noting that it has been 25 years since a case of AHS was found in Saudi Arabia. USDA concluded that changing the import rules for horses from Saudi Arabia presented a low risk of introducing AHS into the U.S. To review the USDA decision and rationale, see: http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2015-03-30/pdf/2015-07212.pdf
The world has come to know and love the wild stallion Cloud and his small herd in the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range through filmmaker Ginger Kathrens’ acclaimedPBS Nature documentaries. In the years since Ginger began making these films, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has improved its management of the popular Pryor Mountain wild horses by using the humane PZP birth control vaccine and ending helicopter roundups. Unfortunately, the BLM is now proposing to remove 30 horses from the Pryor range to bring the population closer to its established management level. Please take action below to ask the BLM to forgo removals and allow the birth control program the necessary time required to reduce the population through natural attrition, not removals.
What’s new? It was Garth Brooks week here in the Sacramento Valley when we got the last call….
Garth, Brooks, and Trisha! They were only 2-3 weeks old when discovered alongside their deceased moms. Thanks to an amazing fundraising effort by the Horse and Man group, AAE was able to act quickly and bring these little ones home to safety. They adapted quickly to milk replacer, and they are thriving now.
All Available Hands, We Need YOU!
Garth, Brooks, and Trisha are only few of the many, many horses in need. Over the next few weeks, we will be working hard to assure we can continue doing what we do at AAE! There are many ways to help.
First up, Help A Horse Day!
Help us compete to win $10,000!!
AAE is celebrating ASPCA’s Help A Horse Day with a Community Outreach Day
Saturday, April 25th
10a-2p
ASPCA’s Help A Horse Day is a national day of recognition for equine organizations. It was designed to help equine rescues and other animal welfare organizations increase their visibility in their community, engage community members, raise funds locally – and be eligible for some of the $50,000 in prize money from the ASPCA. In 2015, there will be seven winners. Three grand prize winners will win $10,000 and four runners-up will receive $5,000.
Can you help us spread the word about the lifesaving work we do on behalf of at-risk horses like Garth, Brooks, and Trisha and show our community how to join in the effort?
then join us
Sunday, April 26th
11a to 3p
for a
Celebration of the Ages and Open Barn at AAE
Sunday, April 26th
11a to 3p
Come One, Come All to A Celebration of the Ages Open Barn!! Come learn more about AAE, what we do to help horses, and learn how you can help a horse.
We’ll be celebrating horses of all ages with our closest friends! Finn and Dylan turn one, while Rusty is 29, and Sapphire is 31. Come enjoy the fun while visiting with the Girls and Boy Scout Troops of America, our local 4-H educators and participants, Folsom Mounted Police and Folsom Lake Trail Patrol, as well as Susan Wirgler Horse and Human Partnership, and of course our community supporters, new and old alike!
The celebration will be held at the All About Equine Barn in El Dorado Hills, CA! We’ll be promoting the event the entire month of April with a variety of activities including El Dorado County’s Give Where You Live campaign on April 23rd! We’ll also be at the local Pet-A-Palooza on April 25th!
Stop by to help us celebrate with fun, games, music & food! You’ll be sure to enjoy the barn and all our amazing adoptable horses!! We can’t wait to see you there!! Please RSVP to info@allaboutequine.org for more information and directions to our barn.
When the call came in over Easter week about a foal in need on the Virginia Range, local heroes in Nevada were ready. The tiny filly had been spotted on the range with her mother and family. She had a serious facial injury and was having difficulty breathing. In short measure, the good folks from Least Resistance Training Concepts (LRTC) in Stagecoach arrived on the scene to rescue her. Read the full story of the Easter foal’s rescue and learn how you can help continue this lifesaving work by clicking below.
The wild horses in the Kiger and Riddle Mountain Herd Management Areas (HMAs) may well be one of the best remaining examples of the Spanish Mustang, and their preservation is vitally important. Despite this, the BLM has set extremely low Allowable Management Levels for these herds — a maximum of 82 horses in Kiger and just 56 in Riddle Mountain! Worse, the agency rounds up these horses every four years, terrorizing and traumatizing them with helicopters, shattering their families and forever robbing many of them of their freedom. The next roundup is scheduled for August 2015. The BLM is targeting 214 of these amazing mustangs for capture; approximately 153 will be permanently removed from the range and put up for adoption.The BLM already stockpiles 50,000 wild horses in holding facilities and has a huge backlog of adoptable horses — bringing more horses into an overburdened adoption system is unacceptable!