Santa Fe New Mexican

Tribe: More than 100 horses apparent victims of drought

- By Felicia Fonseca

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Dozens of horses have died on tribal land in northern Arizona, apparently after getting trapped in a muddy stock pond as drought grips the region.

Navajo Nation spokesman Mihio Manus said Wednesday that 111 horses died in the pond near Cameron over the past week. Officials are trying to determine how best to deal with the carcasses that could attract scavenging birds, dogs and other wildlife, he said.

The stock pond typically is a good spot for thirsty animals, being one of the last in the region to dry up.

But drought conditions left it without much water from runoff or rain this year, tribal officials said.

“It’s been happening for a few years,” said Cameron Chapter President Milton Tso. “Usually one or two or three horses would get stuck and die down there, but this year we didn’t get any snow. We hardly get rain down here.”

Photos showed clusters of horses with dried mud on their bodies, some overlappin­g one another. The pond had a small ribbon of water in its center, surrounded by cracked earth.

Northeaste­rn Arizona is in the worst stages of drought, with a red swatch of exceptiona­l drought painting over the area that would supply water to Cameron. National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Jonathan Suk didn’t have precipitat­ion data for Cameron but said a community upstream on the Little Colorado River is the driest on record since Oct. 1, down 3 inches from normal.

Rain and snow fell in parts of northern Arizona on Wednesday, but Suk said it’s too little, too late.

The tribe has struggled over the years with how to manage large population­s of feral horses. Individual Navajo communitie­s can request roundups, but public outcry has halted such efforts.

Manus said foul play is not suspected in the horses’ deaths.

Tribal and federal officials at the site Wednesday were working to put a fence around the stock pond to keep other livestock away, Tso said. They talked about burying the horses at the pond and redirectin­g any water to create a safer pond for animals, he said.

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