From American
Wild Horse Preservation (AWHPC)
November 2013
Photo by Ellen Holcomb
In October 2013, Mr. Senior and his bachelor friend, who we'll call Guy, were captured by the state of Nevada's Department of Agriculture (NDA) in Stagecoach, Nevada for what the state deemed a potential public safety issue. The details of the capture and Mr. Senior's history are sketchy. What we do know is that when the veterinarian at the prison put Mr. Senior under anesthesia before gelding (all stallions captured by NDA are gelded), the elderly stallion went into convulsions. The vet immediately stopped working on Mr. Senior and let him recuperate. While under anesthesia they determined that Mr. Senior is approximately 30 years old.
Photo by Ellen Holcomb
This stallion, born wild in the Virginia Range of Nevada, was raised by his family and likely joined a bachelor band before gaining a family of his own. For decades he braved the harsh desert landscape -- scorching temperatures during the summer and below freezing temperatures during the winters. This stoic stallion likely fought to protect his family the best way could from predators and other stallions.
Through the droughts and blizzards, he lived for approximately three decades as a proud and free stallion. Now, in his twilight years, he was captured and stolen from the only place he ever called home -- the open range. Had Return to Freedom not had the cooperative agreement with the state of Nevada to purchase horses -- this old man would have been sent to the slaughter auction.
Mr. Senior and Guy, now at sanctuary.
Photo by DreamCatcher Wild Horse
and Burro Sanctuary.
Instead, thanks to the generosity of Return to Freedom-AWHPC supporters he was rescued and sent to DreamCatcher Wild Horse and Burro Sanctuary in northern California. There Mr. Senior and Guy will live as wild horses on 2,000 acres with other rescued horses, and Mr. Senior will be cared for lovingly in his twilight years.
The story of Mr. Senior and his capture is a sad one. It would have been
far more humane to leave this elder stallion in his home on the range and
allow him to die free, than to capture and imprison him, risk his life by
trying to castrate him, and sentence him to spend his final years in
captivity. We salute Mr. Senior -- for all his decades of wisdom, the life
he's lived and what we can learn from him. We continue to work to secure the
on-the-range-management Cooperative Agreement with the state of Nevada to
keep Virginia Range horses like Mr. Senior safe and free on the range.
Even though we're thrilled to be able to prevent these horses from falling into the hands of kill buyers, our work is not done. We still must ensure that caretakers have the resources they need to look after the Carson City 23 and 150 previously rescued Virginia Range horses into the future. And we must implement range management measures to prevent the state from capturing more horses from their homes on the range.
If we fail, more historic mustangs will be captured and placed in danger of being purchased by kill buyers and trucked to Mexico where they will face an unspeakably cruel death at a brutal slaughter plant.
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