“What I saw was brutal.”
The following is from the American Wild Horse Conservation:
“What I saw was brutal.” Brian saw wild horses chased by helicopters, ripped from their families, and left traumatized at one government-funded roundup in Wyoming.
But there is hope — because roundup observers like Brian are showing up to document and expose the truth, and because people like you refuse to look away.
With gratitude, Team AWHC
——– Forwarded message ——- As an award-winning wildlife photographer and photo tour guide, wild places — where the wind moves through the sagebrush and the land still carries the sound of hooves — are where I feel most at home and most connected to our earth. But that sense of peace disappeared the moment I arrived on the ground as a Field Journalist to observe Wyoming’s Adobe Town wild horse roundup for American Wild Horse Conservation (AWHC).
What I saw was brutal. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) helicopters rose early, slicing through the desert sky, driving hundreds of wild horses across dust-choked plains. There were mothers separated from their foals. Stallions panicked and powerless, calling for their families. Young colts struggling to keep up. I witnessed a stallion escape the pen and gain his freedom, only to come back to the trap in search of his family. He was recaptured and sacrificed that chance of freedom for instinctive love. You don’t forget scenes like that. I certainly haven’t. This isn’t “management.” This is trauma — sanctioned, taxpayer-funded cruelty playing out in the shadows. And it’s all across the West. That’s why observers like me show up. We watch, document, and bear witness. Because without us and the AWHC team, the government faces no accountability.
Thank you for your care,
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