Now Driving Online Now Hiring Online Home Seller Subscribe to the JG-TC
21°F
Severe
Who should Democrats choose as their lieutenant governor candidate?
More
Thomas Castillo
Mike Boland
Terry Link
Other
View Results
 






 
Thursday, March 5, 2009 9:59 PM CST
Bad economy sours market for adoptions of wild horses



HERRIMAN, Utah (AP) — When the U.S. Bureau of Land Management put more than 450 wild horses and burros up for adoption here last month, the dirt parking lot was filled with cars and trucks — but very few horse trailers.

While wild horses still draw curious onlookers, the market for adopting them in Utah and across the West has cooled dramatically.

“The economy is playing a huge role,” Jared Redington, who manages 70 hilly acres at the base of the Oquirrh Mountains west of Salt Lake City that serve as a short-term BLM holding facility for horses and burros.

In 2002, more than 7,700 were adopted nationwide. Last year, as part of a steady decline, it was 3,700. And so far this fiscal year, which started Oct. 1, only 713 have been adopted, according to BLM figures.

It’s a discouraging development for an agency that relies on adoptions to help keep wild populations in check and is out of room at long-term holding facilities for unadopted horses.

“This is pretty grave but the BLM understands the gravity of the situation,” said Paul McGuire, acting director of the wild horse and burro program in Nevada, which has more than 17,000 wild horses, the most of any state.

Under a 1971 law, the BLM manages some 33,000 wild horses in 10 Western states, mostly descendants of domesticated horses and burros that escaped or were set loose long ago.

Without any predators in the wild, horse populations can grow quickly, putting a strain on land designated by the BLM for habitat.

Each year, government agents take thousands of horses and burros off the range and put them up for adoption. More than 220,000 have been adopted since 1971.

But these days, even at rock-bottom prices — $125 each and $25 more for a “buddy” — the agency is struggling to find buyers.

“They can’t afford the hay. That’s what I hear the most,” said Vicky Green, president of the Intermountain Wild Horse & Burro Advisors, a West Jordan, Utah-based organization that offers advice for those thinking about adopting horses.

The price for a ton of hay was about $110 when Green first started adopting wild horses 10 years ago. Since then, it’s climbed to around $230 or $240. It’s fallen recently, but not enough to make a difference with adoptions.

Feed costs aren’t the only reason. There is also the rising price of fuel and the falling price for domesticated horses on the market, driven in part by the closure of the nation’s horse slaughterhouses.

And with growing urban populations, there are fewer people with a place for a horse.

“When you look at the potential horse-owning population of the U.S., it is at best static if not shrinking,” McGuire said.

That leaves BLM in a tight spot.

The agency says there are nearly 6,000 more horses on the range than they’d like but they have little room to put the “excess.”

The cost of holding 33,000 horses and burros — which last year was more than $28 million — is “spiraling out of control,” according to Tom Gorey, a BLM spokesman in Washington, D.C.

The Government Accountability Office last fall said the BLM should consider euthanizing wild horses or selling off large numbers to cut costs.

Unchecked, the GAO said, the wild horse program budget could require $58 million this year and $77 million by 2012.

Madeleine Pickens, the wife of Dallas oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens, has proposed a wild horse sanctuary in Nevada. Others have recommended similar operations run by nonprofits.

Another option is ramping up a contraceptive program or finding other ways to reduce fertility in the wild.

Gus Warr, who runs the BLM’s wild horse program in Utah, said he’s hoping part of the adoption downturn is simply that winter adoptions tend to be sluggish.

In the tiny town of Delta, the BLM put 362 horses up for adoption in January. Genetic tests show the horses, members of the Sulphur Herd, are linked to those used by Spanish explorers hundreds of years ago.

Despite their lineage, only eight found new homes that day, though a dozen more have been adopted via the Internet since then. Adoptions have met with better success in warmer climates this winter, including Texas and Florida.

“We’ve got several more months of wet, sloppy, cold, unfavorable conditions,” Warr said. “Once spring gets here, hopefully our adoptions will pick up.”

———

On the Net:

BLM program: http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/prog/wild—horse—and—burro.html

 


Share:          Submit to Reddit         Add to My Yahoo!Add to My Yahoo!   



  Add your comments

*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
  Forgot Your Password?
 

Not already registered?
Then click Here.


JG-TC.com encourages readers to engage in civil conversation with their neighbors. Comments that are submitted are not posted to the site immediately. They go into a queue to be moderated and may take several hours to be reviewed. Comments posted on Saturday may not be reviewed until Sunday afternoon.

In order to keep the page a set width, long lines (mostly long links) will be chopped. Try putting spaces in your links or consider using tinyurl.com to make a smaller link that you can include.

We will never edit or alter your comments, but we do reserve the right to remove comments that violate our code of conduct.

No comment may contain:

* Potentially libelous statements; such as accusing somebody of a crime, defamation of character, or statements that can harm somebody's reputation.
* Obscene, explicit, or racist language.
* Personal attacks, insults, threats, harassment or inciting violence.
* Commercial product promotions.

If you have any questions, please contact our moderator.


 


A day in the life of a registered nurse...

Scholarships available through Charleston Education Association

Charleston Firefighters Local 3200 to offer four $1,000 scholarships

Stew-Stras
kindergarten class mails
137 valentines

Masons get high help with assistance from Mattoon Fire Department

A city without the Mattoon library? Yes, no, maybe

Student Council sends carnations to Heartland Christian Village residents

BOOK REVIEW: 'The Bones of Betrayal' By Jefferson Bass

Support and spirituality: Members of local group meet to socialize, support each other and pray together

Neoga couple meets inspirational fitness guru Richard Simmons

LLC hosts GIS workshops

Extension invites public to take online survey

All-Student Show and art department awards announced

Lupe Fiasco in concert at EIU

Lake Land College offers Quantum Touch Introduction courses this spring

ECIDC expands outreach into two more counties

Consolidated employees celebrate milestone anniversaries

Lumpkin joins board at First Mid-Illinois Bancshares, Inc.

Syngenta team at Paris marks 1 million hours without an accident

Amid hard times, homeschooling families persist

R.R. Donnelley employees mark service anniversaries

Curves participating in 11th annual food drive

Edward Jones earns kudos for training

Co-op receives safety award at state conference

Come to the Farm Show at the mall this weekend

Understanding the hats of a livestock producer

Veteran farm broadcaster to speak at Rural-Urban Luncheon

Pork producers need to become defensive

Bad economy sours market for adoptions of wild horses

Location is key to fishing success

New Mexico's state fish back in Rio Grande

Traditional Anglicans want to join Catholic Church

Campbell to speak in Arthur

Special guests to visit Mattoon
Southern Baptist Church on Sunday

Creator of Mormon calendar loses his appeal for diploma from BYU

Maryland priest adds spice to ministry

Maryland priest adds spice to ministry


 




©2007 Journal Gazette and Times-Courier, divisions of Lee Enterprises.    JG/T-C Do Not Call Policy    Privacy Policy    Contact Us
Tab
Content