“These four young ones here, if we take our time and ease up
on them, we won't spook them,” said Ray Field, as he carefully
and slowly shuffled his feet towards the large animals in front
of him.
“They're just as curious as we are. They want to know what's
going on. They want to know why I'm here,” Field said.
With just a few inches between them, Field reached out his
hand, and the mustang – with hay hanging from its mane and dirt
covering its back – carefully sniffed it before allowing Field
to scratch him behind the ears.
“Most people don’t understand is that, they’re given that
title “wild horse”, and that they’re supposed to be spastic and
something you can’t control. I’m sitting here and telling people
all day long, take your time and ease up to them. They want that
first gentle lesson with you. They want that first gentle
touch,” Field said.
Field has been handling wild horses for many years at his
Franklin ranch. He owns and operates the Wild Horse Foundation,
a non-profit organization that provides a place for captured
wild horses to have a temporary place to live until they can be
placed with a new owner.
“Our number one goal and project here is to keep the wild
horses protected and put them in homes,” Field said.
In states such as Nevada, Wyoming, and Colorado, herds of
wild horses still roam the open ranges. And those states, in
order to control the population of horses, have enacted programs
to safely capture the horses and ship them off to adoption farms
such as Field's.
But with recent government cutbacks and the agriculture
director of Nevada, Tony Lesperance, proposing to suspend the
program in an effort to cut costs, Ray is worried that the
horses could soon be killed freely by land owners who deem the
horses a nuisance to their cattle or land.
“You can’t have a child and suddenly say well at 10 years of
age I’m just going to throw him out into the street. It’s
immoral and illegal. And now the government is trying to neglect
their responsibility here by saying it costs too much money.
Well there’s a lot of programs you can name that cost too much
money, but these are horses. All they’re asking for is a place
to feed, a place to eat, and to call home,” Field said.
If the program is suspended, that would mean that Field would
see less and less shipments of horses to his ranch, which would
eventually shut him - and other organizations like his - down.
And that isn't the only thing worrying Field. A decline in
donations from the public and the rising cost of hay has made
running his wild horse farm slightly more difficult, but Ray
says he plans to try and keep finding homes for the wild horses
that other states don’t want, as long as he can.
“Without the wild horse, we wouldn’t be where we are today.
They’ve carried us all on their backs across this country, and
haven’t asked for a thing in return except to feed and water
them.”
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More Information:
- Ray received a shipment of 36 mustangs on February 17
- The Wild Horse Foundation claims to have a high success
rate of finding homes for the horses
- Ray said that they will provide training to anyone who
isn't sure about how to handle a wild horse
- The Wild Horse Foundation will accept back any horses that
have been adopted out, and that the owner can no longer keep
- The Wild Horse Foundation operates mostly through donations
from the general public
- Ray said he has had many conversations with Senator Kay
Bailey Hutchinson and Congressman Chet Edwards about keeping the
program alive and getting appropriate funding for it, and said
that both have given him their support in his cause
- For more information on how to help the Wild Horse
Foundation or how to adopt a horse, visit their website by
clicking the link below the story