I could spend decades just watching horses roam free. I had a horse when I was 14 but I never thought I owned him, he stayed at a ranch and roamed free but he knew when I was to come see him which was daily and he was always waiting for me, we walked together all over the back pasture, he was my best friend. You have awesome videos, please keep them coming.
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
@Sharon Garrigan Because you love these wild horses, I want to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
This totally breaks my heart. I have seen videos of the roundups and they are totally panic stricken trampling each other and being killed trying to get away. So very heartless ! The volunteers at the Salt River in the Tonto National Forest are doing an amazing job even helping horses that are dumped on their property by heartless owners with medical care and sanctuary’s to take them after they are well. They then can live out their lives in a safe area. Maybe the horses at the Mongolian Rim can get some type of protection program to save these amazing horses from these horrifying roundups. I wish I could save every single one of them .
@@sharongarrigan2596 The Heber Wild Horse Territory, federally designated for them in 1973, was supposed to be a protected area where they could spend their lives; it's just that corrupt people are not honoring the horses' legally protected status and the legal status of that land. Please go to those links and follow those links to comment on the mustangs' behalf. Be their voice! (Read the FS's guidelines for commenting; they ignore form-letters and comments that don't hold to their guidelines) and tell your friends what is happening so they will be moved to speak for them in time, as well. Remember, that comment deadline is soon, April 22.
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
The horses have right to roam. The horses are only there because irresponsible people who give up. Take to a deserted road and dump them like trash. Leave the horses to roam the wilderness
@@jerryturk5960 The lineage of these Heber wild horses have been there for 500 years, they were not "dumped" there. They are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they are doubly legally protected because they live on the federally designated Heber Wild Horse Territory that was so designated for them in 1973. That territory was set aside for the Heber wild horses, not for cattle! They have every legal and moral right to live free in the Wild, unaccosted and unharassed by man. The law prohibits harassment, capture, slaughter and round-up, and it states that they are to be respected as resident on their historic ranges.
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, the Heber wild horses are under threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, the Heber wild horses are under threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
@Kimberly Price Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
@Ladybug Sarah Considering your love for these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
With all of my heart i wish all horses stay wild like they born in nature💚seriously my heart break every time i see horse riding and videos that explain how to break a horse....thats exremely sad 💔i can feel sadness in their eyes...will that day come?💔
@Pride Ahgase Considering your love of seeing these wild horses, I want to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
This is a VERY good video! Thank you for doing such a FINE job and for sharing it! I've posted it to my Arizona playlist that others might enjoy it too. :)
Considering your love of these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
"To blessed animals the utmost kindness must be shown, the more the better. Tenderness and loving-kindness are basic principles of God's heavenly Kingdom. Ye should most carefully bear this matter in mind." ~ Baha'i Faith
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
I could spend decades just watching horses roam free. I had a horse when I was 14 but I never thought I owned him, he stayed at a ranch and roamed free but he knew when I was to come see him which was daily and he was always waiting for me, we walked together all over the back pasture, he was my best friend. You have awesome videos, please keep them coming.
Thank you~
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
The horses are beautiful but your video skills are off the charts. Thank you for four minutes of beauty and escape.
Thank you!
Just beautiful
Love, love, love these magnificent wild horses. Donate as often as I can !
@Sharon Garrigan
Because you love these wild horses, I want to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
This totally breaks my heart. I have seen videos of the roundups and they are totally panic stricken trampling each other and being killed trying to get away. So very heartless ! The volunteers at the Salt River in the Tonto National Forest are doing an amazing job even helping horses that are dumped on their property by heartless owners with medical care and sanctuary’s to take them after they are well. They then can live out their lives in a safe area. Maybe the horses at the Mongolian Rim can get some type of protection program to save these amazing horses from these horrifying roundups. I wish I could save every single one of them .
@@sharongarrigan2596
The Heber Wild Horse Territory, federally designated for them in 1973, was supposed to be a protected area where they could spend their lives; it's just that corrupt people are not honoring the horses' legally protected status and the legal status of that land. Please go to those links and follow those links to comment on the mustangs' behalf. Be their voice! (Read the FS's guidelines for commenting; they ignore form-letters and comments that don't hold to their guidelines) and tell your friends what is happening so they will be moved to speak for them in time, as well. Remember, that comment deadline is soon, April 22.
Beautiful wild horses let keep roaming
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
The horses have right to roam. The horses are only there because irresponsible people who give up. Take to a deserted road and dump them like trash. Leave the horses to roam the wilderness
@@jerryturk5960
The lineage of these Heber wild horses have been there for 500 years, they were not "dumped" there. They are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they are doubly legally protected because they live on the federally designated Heber Wild Horse Territory that was so designated for them in 1973. That territory was set aside for the Heber wild horses, not for cattle! They have every legal and moral right to live free in the Wild, unaccosted and unharassed by man. The law prohibits harassment, capture, slaughter and round-up, and it states that they are to be respected as resident on their historic ranges.
Really nice vid! I'm moving near there this year so that'll be a frequent stop. Thanks for posting.
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, the Heber wild horses are under threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
We live near there in the winter..Quite awesome !
I love horses ❤❤❤❤❤
Beautiful this is FREEDOM :)
Yes, thank you ~
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, the Heber wild horses are under threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
Beautiful video :) love horses!!!
Thank you ~
@Kimberly Price
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
Absolutely Beautiful!!!!🐎🏇🏇🌄
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
Thank you ~
@Ladybug Sarah
Considering your love for these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
lovely thanks for this!
Thank you!
So,,beautiful,,so,,peaceful,,beautiful l,,music,,,great,,,,video 😁😉😗😃😄😚
Thank you ~
With all of my heart i wish all horses stay wild like they born in nature💚seriously my heart break every time i see horse riding and videos that explain how to break a horse....thats exremely sad 💔i can feel sadness in their eyes...will that day come?💔
@Pride Ahgase
Considering your love of seeing these wild horses, I want to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
Bravo!
This is a VERY good video! Thank you for doing such a FINE job and for sharing it! I've posted it to my Arizona playlist that others might enjoy it too. :)
Your welcome. Thank you!
Beautiful !!
Thank you ~
so beautiful
Thank you!
Rosa, the oldest horse died in the last couple of days. I believe she was the white horse with the white mane.
Thanks for letting me know.
:-(
Considering your love of these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
Oh how I wish I could record my Brumbies with such sensitivity and wonder.
Another outstanding video. What is the process to obtain copy rights for the music you play in your videos. Thank you in advance.
There are various website's of which you can pay for copyright privileges. You Tube also has Music options.
Brilliant !
Thank you!
"To blessed animals the utmost kindness must be shown, the more the better. Tenderness and loving-kindness are basic principles of God's heavenly Kingdom. Ye should most carefully bear this matter in mind." ~ Baha'i Faith
I pray that God will take the wild horses from this world to be with us in his Heavenly Kingdom when this world passes away
Considering your appreciation of seeing these horses, I wanted to alert you that up on the Mogollon Rim outside of Heber, AZ, the Heber wild horses are under immediate threat of being removed/culled by the Forest Service. The 30-day comment/objection period for the public to respond to their plan is ending April 22, 2021, so it's vital that people comment before then. The Heber wild horses are legally protected by the Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, and they live on the federally-designated Heber Wild Horse Territory (HWHT), so designated for them in 1973, their 500-year historic range, where they have every legal right to be. But these legal protections are not being respected, honored or upheld, but instead, it's a range war on behalf of ranchers who inappropriately (and possibly illegally) lease grazing rights from the FS to graze their cattle on the HWHT. That land was set aside for the horses, not for cattle. Those ranchers are politically supported by the wealthy and powerful cattle lobby that have long had the ear of the FS, and they want the horses gone. To facilitate that, they speak falsehoods, like claiming a high reproduction rate, when in truth the Heber wild horses have provably maintained stable numbers for well over 20 years (records have been kept for decades), and mathematically, considering a horse's gestation period, the years spent nursing a foal before the mare is free to breed again, and the limited number of breeding pairs in any given year, high reproduction rates are Not possible. They also claim that there are no natural predators to keep mustang numbers in check, but that's not true: Cougars take foals, as do the packs of Mexican Gray Wolves that live in the White Mountains region and along the Mogollon Rim. These horses cannot speak for themselves; they need us to speak on their behalf! We only have until April 22 to speak up for them, so please share this information with those you can. If people don't know, they won't know to speak up in time. Information and LINKS by which to comment at the FS online site, can be found at heberwildhorses dot com and at facebook heber wild horses.
@@cacatr4495 Thank you.
Usery recreation area's,where they come down to drink and play in the salt river area.
Odd song choice. Nice video.
ruclips.net/video/01vXiW22ims/видео.html