
Nevada turns it's back on wild horse sanctuary






photo by carrol abel
Winecup-Gamble Ranch presented it's

By all appearances, the proposal follows guidelines in BLM's new management plan announced by Interior Secretary Ken Salazar on October 7th.




Planned facilities include public viewing with a lodge to be used as a welcoming center and museum dedicated to the history of wild horses. The ranch itself has an interesting history of previous owners such as Bing Croby and Jimmy Stewart. The million acre ranch consists of 250,000 acres of deeded land and 750,000 acres of grazing rights managed by the BLM on public lands.
Elko county commissioners

The Commission argues that before the sanctuary could take horses, the Wild Horse act of 1971 would have to be changed to allow horses on land not occupied by horses at the time of passage. They state " To open the Wild Horse act for this reason would set a bad precedence..."
The Restore Our American Mustang Act, currently in Senate committee, has already opened the Free Roaming Wild Horse and Burro Act. If approved by the Senate and signed by president Obama, the act will restore 19 million acres of land taken from wild horses since 1971.


Elko County encompasses the fourth largest land mass of any county in the nation. BLM handles several Herd Management Areas (HMA's) in or near the county. Many of those HMA's have been "zeroed out" by removing all wild horses from the range.
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