Sunday, October 10, 2010

Madeleine Pickens Gets The Ranch!!!

I thought people might want to know, Mrs. Pickens' hard work has a great result!!!
Pickens buys NV ranch for wild horse sanctuary
RENO, Nev. — Madeleine Pickens, the wife of Texas billionaire T. Boone Pickens, has bought a sprawling Nevada ranch to serve as a wild horse sanctuary that would keep mustangs on the range instead of in government-funded holding facilities.
If approved by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, the move would mark the first time the government has released a large number of mustangs to such a facility.
Pickens is hoping to initially relocate 1,000 horses to the 14,000-acre Spruce Ranch about 70 miles east of Elko. Eventually, she wants to return all 34,000 horses in government-funded holding facilities and pastures to their natural habitat.
"It's such a huge beginning," Pickens told The Associated Press. "I plan to buy more property out there. There's such an overload of horses in government holding."
Pickens said BLM Deputy Director Mike Pool expressed support for the plan during meetings with her last month in Washington.
BLM officials said they recently received a formal written proposal from Pickens and must review it before taking an official position.
"We're encouraged by the recent meetings with her," BLM spokeswoman Celia Boddington said. "We're looking forward to working with her to put the wild horse program on a sustainable track."
Pickens purchased the ranch, which she plans to rename the Mustang Monument preserve, for an undisclosed price. The property comes with grazing rights on 540,000 acres of public land.
Pickens also is negotiating to buy an adjoining 4,000-acre ranch that has grazing rights for 24,000 acres of public land.
Pickens first proposed establishing a wild horse sanctuary in 2008 after the BLM said it was considering euthanasia as a way to stem escalating costs of keeping animals gathered from the open range.
However, the BLM rejected her initial proposal, saying it involved the use of public land where wild horses did not exist when the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act was enacted in 1971. Federal law restricts mustangs from such areas.
Jerry Reynoldson, a consultant to Pickens and a former aide of U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the latest proposal addresses that issue, and wild horses have historically lived in the area.
"What was always holding this sanctuary up was she didn't own a ranch," Reynoldson said. "Everything changed when she bought the ranch. This moves it from the conceptual talking stage to reality."
Under Pickens' latest proposal, a nonprofit foundation would care for the animals with a government stipend of $500 a head, per year. An education center and lodging facilities would be built, and the preserve would be fenced to confine horses.
"(The) wild horse eco-sanctuary will give them their natural habitat back, along with a place that Americans can come and view the horses and learn about the land and American culture," said Stacie Daigle of Pickens' Saving America's Mustangs group.
About 33,700 wild horses roam freely in 10 Western states, about half in Nevada. The BLM set a target level of 26,600 horses and burros in the wild to protect the herd, the range and native wildlife, and rounds up excess horses and offers them for adoption.
Those that are too old or considered unadoptable are sent to long-term holding facilities, where they can live for decades.
Of the $63.9 million designated for the BLM's wild horse and burro program in fiscal 2010, holding costs exceeded $38 million, BLM spokesman Tom Gorey said. More than 8,000 horses are in short-term holding and 25,700 are in long-term pastures in the Midwest.
"The BLM has a moral and fiscal responsibility to do something because they took the horses off public lands and created this debacle," Pickens said.

Today I Learned

Today I learned that the new instructor's boyfriend told me that Blossom is a yellow roan, not a buttermilk buckskin. She would be a buttermilk buckskin if she had a black line down her back. And he should know...because he's done BLM round-ups.
And I also learned that Blossom is going to get wider and that her color is not going to change.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

A big catch-up

September 26, 2010
I'm catching up. Unfortunately this year I didn't go to Reno because Blossom bruised her foot (an abscess) so we've had to wait a while but everything is going to be OK. In fact this next week I'm going to be able to ride Blossom according to what the vet has said is OK. She hasn't been ridden for over two months so I'm going to basically re-train her. It'll be a lot of work but it'll be worth it. I've had to wrap her foot and do Betadyne soaks. There's also been a LOT of stall cleaning because her hoof had to be kept dry and clean. But I've been walking her and she's had some occasional treats of grapes and leaves from the vineyard around the barn. Shhhh--don't tell!

News from Madeleine Pickens

September 17, 2010
I signed up to hear about Madeleine Pickens' project to save mustangs. Here's her letter with the results:
Dear Our Fabulous Wild Horse Supporters, 
We are SO excited to FINALLY announce the best news we have had to share with you in over 2 1/2 years!

OUR MUSTANGS ARE GETTING THEIR SANCTUARY AND HAVE THE BLM’S SUPPORT!!!

Over the past three days, I have been to meetings in Sacramento and again in Washington, DC.  I’ve met with BLM Director, Bob Abbey, Deputy Director, Mike Pool, along with the Wild Horse and Burro team. The BLM has officially agreed to support going forward with the development of the wild horse Eco- sanctuary for the horses in holding! Also in DC, I met with Congressman, Jim Moran, who had already given his blessing, but is submitting legislation to members of Congress on behalf of these wild mustangs. We are so thankful to him and his staff for their efforts on the wild horse and burro issue. All the meetings were fabulous and we could not be happier about the news!

This final acceptance by the BLM this week was the hurdle we had yet to get over. We are so thankful for the opportunity to start our Pilot Program with 1,000 horses, and we aim to get all 36,000+ horses in holding soon after. This action by the BLM shows great leadership on the part of Bob Abbey and Mike Pool for taking a stand for our beautiful mustangs and accepting the solution we have offered. Saving America’s Mustangs gives our sincerest thanks for the monumental cooperation on the part of the BLM for an alternative to the holding pens.

This is a truly a dream come true and I’m thrilled to share this news with all of you!! Let the rejoicing begin!!

Very Sincerely,
Madeleine Pickens and the (*cheering) Mustangs 

My trip to Idaho and Reno--before@

August 8, 2010
I'm going on a trip to Idaho on Friday the 13th. We are going to stay at my dad's friend's house in Ketchum (in Idaho). After our trip to Ketchum we are going to go straight back to Reno and meet Blossom and Tracee and stay in Reno so we can compete in the Western States Wild Horse & Burro show. I might not make a couple of posts while I'm gone.

Blossom's first injury

August 8, 2010
Before the adventure trail ride I told Tracee that I thought Blossom's right hind leg was sore and she said that she might look at it after the trail ride. So after the trail ride Tracee noticed and said that when the vet came we would show the vet. The vet was coming to do Blossom's coggins test anyway. A coggins test is basically just a check up test so that Blossom can cross state lines (for Reno). So the vet saw Blossom's foot and said that her foot was bruised because the top of the foot somehow got smushed down and was curling under. So they sedated her and put a big wrap and bandage on. Then they told me to give her some medicine in her lunch and dinner and also to keep the foot wrapped and try to keep it as clean as possible. And that I couldn't ride her for a week. So after a couple days Tracee noticed that the bandage was getting really dirty and it was kind of wet. And then we took it off and put a diffferent wrap and put a boot on so it would stay clean. Then she was kept in a stall,  not an outside paddock.  It did stay clean; every couple days we would soak her foot in some minerals and change the wrapping.
So on Saturday the 7th I rode her in a group lesson and she was fine and she was sound, which means she was all better and walked and trotted fine.


An adventure trail ride Part 2 (final)

August 8, 2010
After the vulture and dead coyote incident we kept going on our trail ride.
I'm going to describe about a hill that everyone loves to go on and whenever anyone goes on a trail ride they wish to go up the big hill! So the big hill is a hill (obviously!) behind a winery called Ehlers Lane Winery and surrounded by vineyards. It is a steep hill where you usually canter or gallop up which everyone loves to do because you get to go really fast with your horse. OK. So now that I have explained to you about the big hill I'm going to finish my story.
So after we passed the vultures and kept going on our trail ride we passed under huge trees and let the horses nibble on some pears. After that I was very excited because Tracee asked me if I wanted to go up the big hill. I was kind of nervous so I thought about it for a second and said sure because I wanted to go up the hill and before I said anything Tracee could kind of tell that I was nervous and so she reassured me and said that it was physically impossible for horses to buck up hill and horses really can't rear up hill either. So now I felt a lot better about going up the big hill and in about 5 minutes we were right there turning around the corner to go up the big hill. There was something inside me that made me be nervous but my adventurism took over.
I thought I would be cantering and galloping up the hill in no second with the wind in my face and my hair blowing but Blossom just trotted up the hill peacefully and quietly but also she went really fast so it was still awesome and very fun! And then we turned around because we were going to back down the other side next to the winery but there were scary noises that the horses were scared of so we just thought we wouldn't take the risk and we went down the big hill---which I never had done before (I think). And they just walked down the big hill because if they trotted or cantered they could trip and hurt themselves because it's so steep.
Then we went back home and I got off and thought to myself, what a wonderful trail ride. I'd do that anytime. I was also thinking what a great story I can tell!