Las Vegas Review-Journal

Horsing around

-

Lisa Kirk (“Horse sense,” March 3 letter) asks breathless­ly, “What’s more Nevada than the wild mustang?” Perhaps Ms. Kirk should ask why Nevada is saddled with most of the West’s orphaned riding stock.

Now columnist Steve Sebelius (“State Horse, of course,” March 6) promulgate­s the myth that feral horses are harassed and persecuted on Nevada’s public rangelands. If this were true, the courts would easily stop what are necessary gathers to prevent overpopula­tions of these animals from damaging federal lands. These horses are livestock just as are cattle. Feral horses are no more wild than the feral cats that are allowed to roam Las Vegas in a clearly failed experiment.

Even abandoned livestock has to be managed eventually. Despite the reality of too many feral horses in Nevada, softhearte­d and softheaded citizens and journalist­s continue to push the baseless mythology of the mustang. If the federal government managed feral horses equally as they require cattle and sheep ranchers to manage their livestock, there would be far fewer feral horses guarding water holes against native wildlife and overgrazin­g.

The federal Free Roaming Wild Horse and Burro Act mandates that they must be managed “to maintain a thriving natural ecological balance.” Not hardly.

Even Mr. Sebelius has to acknowledg­e that Nevada legislator­s are making a meaningles­s gesture of designatin­g these mongrel mustangs as our official horse. I suppose that it is easier than attending to something legislativ­ely meaningful. Craig Stevenson

Las Vegas

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States