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Tuesday, April 29, 2025
HomeHorse RescueTitle: Join the 2025 Wild Horse and Burro Adoption Event in Hamilton,...

Title: Join the 2025 Wild Horse and Burro Adoption Event in Hamilton, Montana


HAMILTON, Mont. – The Bureau of Land Management Montana/Dakotas is launching its 2025 Wild Horse and Burro Adoption Event series with a kick-off in Hamilton, from May 2 to 4.

The event will allow the public to adopt 37 wild horses, including yearlings, 2-5-year-old mares and geldings. Attendees can view the animals, participate in a silent auction, and experience a special “First Touch” training clinic led by Mustang Matt, a renowned mustang trainer. Admission is free.

Patrick Merrill, BLM Montana/Dakotas Wild Horse & Burro Coordinator, emphasized the significance of adopting these animals. "Wild horses and burros are living symbols of the American West, and by adopting one, you’re becoming part of a legacy of resilience and freedom," Merrill said. "These animals are smart, strong, and adaptable – making excellent companions for farms, ranches, or outdoor adventures."

The event schedule includes:

  • May 2: Viewing and Silent Auction from 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
  • May 3: Mustang Matt “First Touch” Clinic from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
  • May 3 and 4: First Come/First Serve Adoption Event from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

For more information, visit the BLM website.

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Montana/Dakotas is set to launch its 2025 Wild Horse and Burro Adoption Event series in Hamilton from May 2 to 4. This event will feature the opportunity for the public to adopt 37 wild horses, including various age groups. Attendees can also participate in a silent auction and a special training clinic called “First Touch,” led by renowned trainer Mustang Matt, with free admission for all.

Patrick Merrill, the BLM’s Wild Horse & Burro Coordinator, highlighted the importance of adopting these animals, describing them as symbols of the American West. He noted that wild horses and burros are intelligent and adaptable, making them excellent companions for various activities, including farming and outdoor adventures.

The event schedule includes a viewing and silent auction on May 2, the “First Touch” clinic on May 3, and a first-come, first-served adoption event on May 3 and 4. For further details, interested individuals can visit the BLM website.

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Title: "Healing Hearts: The Transformative Power of Animal Sanctuaries"

Some experiences thought to be the most insightful include being able to do some hands-on work, such as lifting hay and grooming the horses. While it was a bit of fun, it allowed us to appreciate the dedication of the volunteers supporting the charity. Another part of the trip that stood out was visiting the beekeeper who provided fascinating information about how the bees work individually and together as a colony, as well as how important it is to preserve these vital pollinators.

The sanctuary can also be a place where people seek refuge. Horses are great healers. They understand our emotions before we can comprehend them ourselves and so people who have experienced bullying or suffer from PTSD can be helped along their road to recovery by spending time with the animals who too have experienced some of the worst of humanity.

A story that mirrors some of the true malice these animals have experienced is a foal we met. At the young age of six months, he was ridden by an 18 stone man relentlessly. Horses’ bodies are not usually wholly developed until they are around 7 years old; they can accommodate a person at 3 but only very sparingly. Chris intervened and liberated the foal, but his battle was not over yet. You could count every rib on his side; his body was so starved and weak that it took months for him to resemble somewhat of a healthy horse.

This story echoes the hardships of a multitude of animals in our community currently, ones that fell into the wrong hands and have to deal with the cards they were dealt. So, we believe it’s down to the people who are willing to fight, to try to rewrite their stories, for as Chris, the founder, said, ‘you can be clever and go to Mars or cure disease but we still need the simple people, the bin men, the civil servants and the people who just care. They are the ones who keep the world running.’

DGS Chapter’s visit to Spirits Rest was an enriching and enjoyable experience. Meeting with so many people made us realize just how much it takes to run a charity like this one, and how any support, however small and in whatever way, can make such a huge difference. We hope this article has been enlightening in making you feel just as strongly about this cause as we do. Dartford Grammar School has decided to support this charity and its cause. Money raised from the dumpling sale later this week will be donated to the charity, and awareness will be raised, both in the school community and outside.

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Title: "The Silent Call of Wild Horses: A Plea for Freedom Amidst Urban Chaos"

It’s easy to lose sight of untouched nature in a city like Los Angeles. Helicopters and airplanes often look like birds, freedom from traffic often seems impossible, and skyscrapers are the giants of this concrete jungle we live in. It’s hard to even imagine wild horses existing in a world that at times feels so manmade and commercialized. Roaming free, they are the epitome of how wildlife can still thrive. That is, if we let them.

Maria Marriott, an award-winning wild horse photographer and artist, said in an emailed statement that following and photographing wild horses has led her to the realization that many of their qualities, whether that be their familial bonds, sense of trust and protection for one another, or their pure determination and grit, are found in the human experience too.

“Human beings have this kind of elemental, almost spiritual connection to horses, because we’ve been partners for so long,” Ashley Avis, a filmmaker, writer, and advocate for wild horses, said. “They helped us build our world, they helped us build this country, they helped us fight wars, they stood beside us.” Avis is the founder and president of the Wild Beauty Foundation, which works to protect wild horses, wolves, and wildlife by creating public awareness through film and education. In 2023, Avis and her team released the documentary "Wild Beauty: Mustang Spirit of the West," a film that emphasized the current dangers horses face in the wild.

The reality is that wild horses and burros are in danger. Their populations are dwindling, and it’s not because their resources are low or they are getting sick. Rather, it’s because we’re actively taking away their freedom. Federal law defines wild horses and burros, which are free-roaming donkeys, as unclaimed and unbranded horses that can be found on public lands. Most people are unaware that wild horses are being rounded up by the government and held in captivity, Avis said.

In accordance with the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971, the Bureau of Land Management and United States Forest Service manage wild horses on federal lands. Population reduction and removal of wild horses are standardized by these two government agencies when animal populations are deemed too large to sustain.

“The BLM, since they started managing wild horses, has just managed them in the most cruel and costly way,” Amelia Perrin, American Wild Horse Conservation’s senior communications manager, said. “They don’t put any care towards managing these iconic animals as a natural resource on our public lands, but instead often are caving to private interests in removing wild horses from our public lands to make room for private cattle and other extractive uses.”

Our taxes fund the inhumane, brutal helicopter roundups that are both physically and psychologically traumatic for both horses and foals. During roundups, herds are being chased extremely long distances, causing stress, severe dehydration, injuries, and sometimes death. When the BLM does this, they use helicopters to funnel wild horses and burros into holding facilities, which currently hold 68,000 of the animals, Perrin said. Because public observation is not permitted at these facilities, there is no way to make sure these horses are being treated humanely.

Rounding up horses is additionally not a cheap operation for the public. In 2021, it cost taxpayers about $78 million to care for caught wild horses and burros. “Seeing pregnant mares running heavily, gestating their babies, or these tiny little foals stampeded to death and running their hooves off, and you think, I’m paying for that and I don’t know,” Avis said.

Wild horses embody everything that humans care for, Perrin said. When we separate them from their families and their freedom, we’re separating them not only from what they care for but what we care for as well. “The most effective solutions have to include a combination of actions (birth control, leasing of public lands, less control of horse’s natural predators, etc.) that contribute to the lowest number of wild horses being rounded up and living in captivity as possible,” Marriott said in the statement.

Often ignored is the scientifically proven positive impact that wild horses have on the ecosystems of our public lands. Wild horses spread seeds, which can survive their digestive process, over the large areas in which they roam, while also helping to fertilize the soil. Our society is having a profound moment of disconnect with nature, Avis said. This mindset is dangerous at a time of rapid changes in climate and growing threats to species across the globe, including wild horses.

In a time when the world seems to be increasingly susceptible to natural disasters, why are we harmfully reducing the populations of animals that can help protect our natural environments? Not too long ago, the BLM was incentivizing individuals to adopt through their Adoption Incentive Program, although a federal district judge temporarily halted the program March 3. Despite its seemingly noble intention in encouraging horse adoptions, the AIP left wild horses vulnerable to being sold into the slaughter pipeline by kill buyers.

“People come in, whether it’s an individual or family members, and they’ll adopt a truckload, and they’ll flip those horses into slaughter, into the pipelines of Mexico or Canada, where our federally protected icons are meeting unimaginable fates,” Avis said. Horses that are bought for slaughter are usually shipped out of the U.S. to countries where there are markets for horse meat. Transported in horrific conditions, these horses are often lacking water, food, rest, and any space to move, before being inhumanely slaughtered, according to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Horse slaughter is currently illegal in the U.S., although this ban is not permanent and must be reviewed annually by Congress. There is nothing legally stopping the transportation of live equines across U.S. borders to slaughter plants, and a federal law that permanently bans this act needs to be enacted. The Save America’s Forgotten Equines Act stands for exactly that.

Small changes are being made, but more attention needs to be brought to the plight that wild horses are facing in today’s world where we often leave what goes unseen, unheard. “What I’ve come to realize is that, without a voice, wild horses will always come out on the losing end,” Marriott said in the statement.

Wild horses and burros are living symbols of American history and cultural heritage, and they deserve to be recognized. “How they persist despite unendurable odds, and how they are completely free, it isn’t difficult to see them as representatives of freedom and the best of the American spirit,” Marriott said in the statement. By protecting the freedom of wild horses, we are also protecting the freedom of nature. The wild is something we know humanity can live harmoniously with.

“We have to step outside of ourselves and realize that there’s something greater that we need to do that’s beyond us,” Avis said. “In recognizing that, we find our way back to the connection to our wild world.” Just because we live in a metropolitan hub of orderly human chaos doesn’t mean the wild isn’t calling. Because it is, and wild horses are asking us to listen.

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