Tag Archives: Cloud Foundation

Congress: Don’t Kill the “Wild” in Our Wild Horses

More than ever, our wild horses need you now! BLM’s $1 Billion Wild Horse Disaster Plan pushes for massive roundups and the destruction of wild horse social behaviors through surgical sterilization.

The BLM plans to resume roundups on July 1st and intends to capture 6,000 horses before October. If this happens, more than 11,000 wild horses and burros will have lost their freedom this year.

This is a HUGE step backwards.

We must convince Congress to protect wild behaviors, allow for the voluntary retirement of grazing permits in wild horse habitat, and mandate proactive humane PZP fertility control.

Congress needs to hear from you today to stop this BLM Disaster Plan.

The Cloud Foundation
107 South 7th St
Colorado Springs, CO 80905
www.thecloudfoundation.org

Please Help Us Create the World We Want for Our Wild Horses and Burros

We know you love America’s mustangs and burros as much as we do, and you want them safe and protected on the land that is rightfully theirs. The Cloud Foundation exists to make that happen. We’re working to create a world where every foal born in the wild gets to live its entire life in precious freedom.

We’re a tiny organization with a huge heart – and just like Cloud, we are fighters! We will keep fighting until our mission and vision are a reality. That’s our promise to you and to them.

Please help us, if you can, continue our essential work:

  • to save the 1700+ Caliente Complex horses who stand to lose their freedom forever.
  • to prevent the zeroing out of thousands of horses in the Great Divide Basin, Salt Wells, White Mountain, and Adobe Town HMAs of Wyoming.
  • to stop BLM from experimenting on wild mares, ripping their ovaries out as a method of “fertility control.”
  • to document and protect Cloud’s family and the entire Pryor Mountain herd.
  • to create a PZP darting program in the Steward Creek HMA of Wyoming and beyond. The more herds managed by humane means, the closer we are to ending the horrific roundup-and-warehousing of our mustangs and burros.

Please donate if you can today, and help us create the world we want for our wild ones. We can’t do this without your help, and every donation, no matter the size, makes a difference in this fight.

The Cloud Foundation
www.thecloudfoundation.org

Pryor Wild Horse Herd in Jeopardy

As many of you know, I’ve been documenting the lives of the Pryor Mustangs for a very long time. In 1994 I had a chance encounter with the stunning black stallion, Raven. A year later Raven and his family brought their newborn colt out of the forest right in front of my camera. The pale colt tottered behind his stunning palomino mother, Phoenix. I named the fragile foal Cloud.

Cloud grew into a powerful fighting stallion. Until the very end he battled to keep his family together. He never gave up. And neither can we.

Please click to watch the video, and take a few minutes to comment on this very dangerous plan for the Pryor herd.

Click Here to Take Action

Happy Trails,
Ginger Kathrens

The Cloud Foundation
www.thecloudfoundation.org

Help Fight Massive Extermination of Wyoming’s Wild Horses

The BLM is pushing a Massive Extermination Plan for the wild horses in southern Wyoming. This is a direct assault – get rid of wild horses to allow for the Rock Spring Grazing Association’s livestock.

We are not willing to accept, on any terms, the zeroing out of southern Wyoming’s wild horses.

The Cloud Foundation is proud to offer an easy way for you to submit personalized public comments directly to the BLM opposing this Extermination Plan.

Please take the time to comment here, even if you have already signed a petition. Your voice has never been more important.

Please share with your friends and family. We must show BLM that Americans – from all walks of life and across all political aisles – want Wyoming’s Wild Horses protected.

This Extermination Plan must be stopped. Without your help these magnificent animals are doomed.

TAKE ACTION NOW

The Cloud Foundation
107 South 7th St
Colorado Springs, CO 80905
www.thecloudfoundation.org

Ginger Kathrens Discusses Zeroing Out 6 HMAs in Nevada

It’s official. Our legal team has filed the appeal. The Cloud Foundation and our partners are fighting the BLM to stop the eradication of all the wild horses in the Caliente Complex of eastern Nevada. Last month, a federal judge sanctioned the wipe-out of 1700+ wild horses living in Caliente, sentencing them to roundup and life imprisonment. But we’re not taking this bad ruling lying down. See what Ginger has to say about the lawsuit and why we need to fight!

The Cloud Foundation
107 South 7th St
Colorado Springs, CO 80905
www.thecloudfoundation.org

Stop Wild Horse Eradication Plan in Caliente Complex

The Cloud Foundation is fighting hard in federal court to stop BLM from zeroing out — or permanently removing — ALL wild horses in the remaining 6 HMAs of the Caliente Complex of eastern Nevada. While BLM claims the horses are destroying the range, they continue to permit thousands of cattle to graze in the same area.

Last month, a federal judge issued a ruling against us and the 1700+ wild horses who live in Caliente. Now the Cloud Foundation, along with Western Watershed Projects, is preparing to fight this bad ruling.

Our legal team is getting ready to file the appeal. We cannot concede defeat. If we do, these horses will lose their freedom forever — 1,700 more victims of the BLM’s sick system of wild horse imprisonment.

Lawsuits are expensive and we need your help. Thousands of wild horses are slated for removal if we don’t prevail.

We know this is a big ask in these unprecedented times. But without your help, these magnificent animals will lose their families and their freedom, and some will likely lose their lives. Please donate if you can to this worthy cause. Together, we will fight with everything we’ve got to keep them free. That’s our promise to you, and to them.

No donation is too small (or too big!). We know these are extraordinary times, but YOU are extraordinary people. Thank you for everything you do, for how much you care, and for your support of our work.

The Cloud Foundation
107 South 7th St
Colorado Springs, CO 80905
www.thecloudfoundation.org

Black Mountain Burros Need Your Voice – NOW

The BLM is pushing a 10-year plan that would destroy America’s last large and genetically-healthy wild burro population. The proposal would roundup 1,250 of the 1,700 burros (nearly 75%) and artificially skew the female-to-male ratio which would likely cause tremendous social disruption.

We are calling on BLM to abandon the proposed massive roundup plan, and instead utilize humane on-the-range management. We’re asking them to create a Black Mountain Burro Range, which would eliminate livestock grazing and protect this cherished burro population and all wildlife for years to come. Please act to protect these beautiful burros NOW!

COVID19: Rewilding Our Relationship with the World

In a rapidly changing world, one thing is for certain. Humanity needs to take a hard look at our relationship to animals and nature. In this article from The CANA Foundation, the link is established between the exploitation of animals in the wet markets of Asia and the callous treatment of our wild horses, though they are not yet slaughter-bound, for private gain.

As an organization dedicated to protecting wildlife on our wild lands, TCF advocates respect for all species. As the article states, “We must REWILD our way of thinking. We have to take a step back and see that the greatest and most important assets that we have are the lands and the animals that call them home. Somewhere in the connection between those two things and us, lies our humanity, and we desperately need to find it again.”

The Cloud Foundation
107 South 7th St
Colorado Springs, CO 80905
www.thecloudfoundation.org

Wild Horses Are Native to North America, Right?

Written in 2008, this short article provides a great overview in layman’s terms of why our magnificent wild horses are a reintroduced native species to North America. Dr. Jay Kirkpatrick, researcher of reproductive physiology and developer of the groundbreaking PZP fertility control vaccine, along with Dr. Patricia Fazio, researcher of equid evolution, outline facts that simply don’t change: Equus Caballus, the modern horse, originated and evolved here in North America and therefore must be a native species.

The Cloud Foundation
107 South 7th St
Colorado Springs, CO 80905
www.thecloudfoundation.org

Say “NO!” to NEPA Changes

The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) is arguably the most important environmental law in the United States. Facts, science, public input, and minimizing negative impacts to the environment are the cornerstones of this essential law.

NEPA provides protections for our wild horses, the environment, clean water, clean air, and all wildlife. The federal government is proposing new rules that would gut NEPA regulations and eliminate or reduce public participation, sidestep environmental analysis, and allow industry (such as livestock interests, mining, drilling, logging, etc.) to write their own environmental reviews. This is categorically unacceptable and contrary to the original intent of the law.

Please take just a minute to submit comments telling the government to abandon this dangerous proposal.

The Cloud Foundation
107 South 7th St
Colorado Springs, CO 80905
www.thecloudfoundation.org

What Makes a Wild Horse Wild?

By Ginger Kathrens

In 1994 I saw my first wild horses in the Pryor Mountains of Montana. A black stallion was eating snow at the base of a red butte. When he noticed my sister who had on a bright white golf jacket, he pranced toward her and snorted. His mares, yearling, and newborn foal responded to his warning, dashing from the shadows of the butte to the safety of nearby hills.

Captivated by the striking stallion named Raven and the spectacular wild horse range they call home; I began documenting their lives in the wild. On May 29, 1995 they brought their newborn colt out of the forest right in front of my camera. I named him Cloud and his life is the subject of three PBS Nature series documentaries.

The assertion that same sex herds of horses in captivity are the equivalent of wild horse families in the wild is ludicrous. A single-sex group of geldings or mares in a pasture bears no resemblance to the intricate and dynamic society of a wild horse herd.

In the wild, the horses make all the decisions, decisions that often make the difference between life and death. Where to go when a storm comes, where to find water in a drought, when to run and when to stand their ground — these are decisions shared by the band stallion and often a strong lead mare. Cloud was lucky to have Sitka for a time, a strong female who could even tell the powerful and impetuous Cloud where to go and when.

I documented Cloud from the day he was born to the time, 20 years later, when he disappeared. His body was never found, but that is not unusual. Many wild horses decide to isolate themselves at the end of their lives. And this is an important word to remember: decide.

Mustangs in captivity do not have the ability to decide much of anything. They are fed, they are restrained in pastures or dirt paddocks, and they are in a same-sex herd of all geldings (castrated males) or all mares.

The horses on my small Colorado ranch have more of a society than any same-sex herd in a BLM corral or sanctuary.  Flint is the leader of my little band which includes Cloud’s birth sisters Mahogany (Flint’s lead mare) and Smokey. The other four geldings, Sky, Sax (Cloud’s youngest brother), BJ, and Swasey, take their lead from Flint and, to a lesser extent, Mahogany. But I would never pretend that they have the social intricacies or intense behaviors of a real wild horse family.

Wild horse social structure is complex and fascinating. It is essential to their survival in the wild. In many ways wild horses are like wolves. There is a dominant male, often a powerful female, and there are subordinate members of the family, including other females. Young males are asked to leave the family by their fathers, and young females get a wandering eye around two years of age. Only bachelor stallions that are skilled fighters and have a strong desire to procreate can win and keep mares.

It is disingenuous of BLM – and others seeking to rid the range of these magnificent animals – to tell the public they can see “wild horses” in “public off-range pastures.” None of the captivating natural behaviors just described are seen among geldings or mares in a man-made, fenced environment.

What the public is seeing are human-influenced, same-sex pastured horses, who bear little resemblance to their friends and families still lucky enough to be running wild and free on our open ranges.

The Cloud Foundation
107 South 7th St
Colorado Springs, CO 80905
www.thecloudfoundation.org