Monday, February 1, 2010

A Senior BeBob Cowboy Has His Say

George Parman, a senior "Welfare Rancher" / BeBop Cowboy Says: "Let locals run the range"

Hay George, you mean "Let Locals Ruin the Range," Dont You?

"Horses, cattle will have plenty to eat"

By GEORGE PARMAN


SPECIAL TO THE REVIEW-JOURNAL

I'm well into my 70s now. I've been in and out of the ranching business all my life. I've run a lot of horses, trapped coyotes and bobcats, cut post over a good portion of the state of Nevada. And I tell you, I have never been so disgusted.

For more than 50 years, all I've been hearing is how livestock are destroying the range, how cruel the mustangers were, or how the trees and bugs are being harmed. When, in fact, it's been the government and all the do-gooders who have been the problem causers.

Take the wild horse issue, for example. For years I thought people would wake up and come to their senses someday, and things would get better. But instead it's gotten worse. I just wish I knew how many horses have died because of mismanagement in Nevada since The Wild and Free Roaming Horse Act was passed in 1971. It's got to be in the thousands.

Even up until last winter there in Kobeh Valley there were at least a couple hundred horses that were starving. But nothing was worse than what happened in the country south of there in the 1990s. Clear from U.S. Highway 6, all the way up through Little Sand Springs Valley and that country, clear to U.S. Highway 50, the range was eaten off to nothing. Water holes were tromped in -- water developments destroyed.

All because people from all over the country seem to think they have to have a say in how our wild horses are to be managed.

I've taken a lot of pictures of dying horses over the years. Pictures of horses attempting to suck water from the mud of a spring which has been nearly destroyed by the trampling of horses. Sometimes you can see how the horse has pawed the ground -- too weak to get up -- suffering day after day, until the poor thing finally died. Just imagine, if you will, the total impact of these kinds of situations -- wildlife, livestock, everything suffers.

Horses, it should be remembered, are larger than most animals. Even under ideal conditions, when there is plenty of feed and water on a range, they'll run other livestock or wildlife off a water hole. But when conditions like this occur, it can be terrible. Dozens of horses, all standing around waiting for a chance to suck mud or sip a little water, half of them being big studs, kicking and fighting each other and fighting off all the younger and weaker animals.

Nothing can be more cruel than a bunch of mustang studs, biting and kicking everything around them. No other animal can compete. Colts get knocked down, trampled and separated from their mothers -- who are often so dehydrated they don't care whether they have a colt or not.

But that doesn't describe the full extent, the true horrors of it all. When these kinds of things happen, it doesn't happen in just one small area or at just one water hole -- it happens over an entire rangeland.

The sad thing is, there seems to be no end in sight for these kinds of tragedies. The number of radical animal rights people and horse lovers, who in the end cause all the damage and suffering, seems to be growing.

And to think the only solution that anyone has come up with is the "adopt a horse" program, or holding facilities where thousands of horses are held indefinitely at the cost of millions of dollars each year. To me it's insanity.

What we should do is we should return to the old days, when people living within local communities decided what was best for the horses and resources that are found within their communities. Instead, people looking out the windows of their clean and polished offices in Texas or Colorado dream about the mustangs they own in Nevada, while the horses themselves starve and more and more ranchers are forced out of business.

No, what we need to do is to let the ranchers and the mustangers take care of the problem, just as they did in the old days. Back then, along in the fall a handful of cowboys would take their saddle horses, throw a bunch of grub and their bedrolls in the back of a pickup, and off they'd go to do a little mustanging.

It was a perfect system. The most qualified and experienced people were engaged. The horses were automatically kept at reasonable numbers. It cost the taxpayer nothing. The best of the horses were put on the market for people to use and enjoy. The remainder of the older and less undesirable animals were euthanized via a facility that made good use of the end product.

Rangelands were not overstocked. Springs were kept open and maintained by the ranchers. The cattle had plenty to eat. The horses had plenty to eat. Wildlife did well. Everything was better.

Of course no one would agree to something like that. What would all the wild horse people do if they agreed to something like that? They wouldn't have a cause to pursue, or anything to bitch about. What about the people who administer the program? It wouldn't do to put them out of work -- especially during times of high unemployment.

And so I suppose we will go on, doing as we have in the past, even if our rangelands continue to deteriorate, the horses continue to suffer, and more and more ranchers are put out of business. It's insanity, I tell you, insanity. But that's the way things are done these days.


George Parman runs a few head in the Diamond Valley, north of Eureka.

See original article by going to the link below;
http://www.lvrj.com/opinion/let-locals-run-the-range-83191887.html

And click on the title above to see what a Bebop Cowboy (or Cowgirl) is.....

1 comment:

sandra longley said...

BeBob, i am guessing you have seen better days all the way around..I have lived and worked a ranch in N.Nevada and haven't seen what you saw at that water hole..My guess is if you hadn't run so damn many cows on the range-there'd be some water and food left...Fact is..we, the citizens of the united States own those horses and that land you and your cows seem to think you are entitled to..Lets out the truth-there are one helluva lot more cattle on that country than horses..its a fact..and if bothers you so much to see those poor horses...WHY don't you haul some water and a few bales of hay out there?