Wild Horse Fire Brigade

Wild Horse Fire Brigade We have the experience that makes it work TOP 12 BENEFITS OF "WILD HORSE FIRE BRIGADE"

1. Wild horses (E. More here.

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The WHFB Plan mitigates wildfire by restoring wild horses as keystone herbivores into appropriate vacant wild-lands beyond areas of conflict with commercial enterprises. Saving Wild Horses:

Wild Horse Fire Brigade provides sustainable cost-effective natural conservation of native species American wild horses by rewilding-relocating them into designated wilderness areas that are economically and

ecologically appropriate, which have abundant forage and water, where wild horses are restored to their evolutionary roles as north American keystone herbivores. In such areas, wild horses are no longer commingled with livestock, which eliminates the political and economic pressures that are currently being applied to native species American wild horses.

2. Rewilding Benefits:

Rewilding American wild horses from ‘Herd Areas’ and ‘Herd Management Areas’ where they are currently mismanaged via being commingled with livestock, and relocating wild horses into designated wilderness areas that are both ecologically and economically appropriate, is a genetic benefit for wild horses. Over the past centuries, many herd areas have been managed specifically for livestock production and have by design been made virtually devoid of apex predators, making such areas ecologically unsuited for wild horses. Caballus) evolved in North America 1.7-million years ago, and are a prey species that require co-habitation with their co-evolved predators. Apex predators engage in the process of Natural Selection that preserves the genetic vigor of wild horses. The predators of wild horses (bears, mountain lions, wolves and coyotes) take the weak, sick and elderly animals, which preserves the overall genetic health and vigor of wild horse herds, while also managing populations to nominal levels, thereby negating the great expense of the ill-conceived notion that contraceptives should be used on American wild horses. The use of any form of contraception (chemicals to sterilize mares or castration of stallions) is by definition ‘selective breeding’ and leads to genetic erosion. Such actions are currently being used as a misguided work-around due to the lack of apex predators, and interferes with the critically important processes related to the behavioral ecology of wild horses. Stallions must be allowed to compete for breeding rights to mares, and a mare’s hierarchy in a family band is partly determined by her sexual status and ability to procreate, which stallions and other mares can sense. More here: Selective Breeding of Wild Horses Accelerating Genetic Erosion

Finally, the relocation (rewilding) of wild horses from herd areas frees-up more grazing for livestock in areas that are virtually devoid of apex predators. The combination of the foregoing is a win-win for the wild horses and the livestock interests, and ends the longstanding and very costly range war.

3. Massive Savings for Taxpayers:

Putting wild horses back into the wilderness where they belong immediately saves American taxpayers over $150-million in annual costs related to the Bureau of Land Management's and the United States Forest Service's inhumane, wasteful and unreasonable management, helicopter roundups, and off-range holding and feeding (warehousing) of American wild horses.

4. Wildfire Fuels Reduction and Maintenance:

Wild horses deployed into designated wilderness areas, where motorized vehicles and equipment and prescribed burns are generally prohibited by law, naturally reduce and maintain hot-burning grass and brush fuels to nominal levels. Thus, according to the leading science today, this action reduces both the frequency and intensity of wildfire. Grass and brush fuels reduced and maintained by wild horses also reduces the potential adverse effects of overheating soils and thereby, destroying the microbiome, to name just one adverse effect. More here: Low-severity wildfires impact soils more than previously believed - Negative effects of low-severity fire on soil structure and organic matter.

​Given the horrific costs in human life, adverse health impacts and climate impact from billions of tons of toxic smoke, loss of homes in the thousands annually, and the insured and uninsured losses, which are in the $-billions annually, even a small reduction in wildfire results in additional savings in the realm of hundreds of $-millions annually.

5. Natural Reseeding of Native Plants:

Unlike invasive species ungulates (cattle & sheep), wild horses have a simple digestive system that scientific studies show, do not digest the majority of the native plant and grass seeds that wild horses consume. Therefore, even as wild horses are reducing wildfire fuels via grazing, wild horses concurrently reseed the landscape via the intact seeds that are deposited back onto the landscape and able to germinate in their droppings. More here: Horse dung germinable seed content in relation to plant species abundance, diet composition and seed characteristics.

6. Forests Benefited:

Wild horses have co-evolved using trees as shelters during all seasons. This symbiotic relationship benefits the horse with shelter and benefits trees because horses graze the grass and brush fuels under the trees they use as shelters, break-off low limbs (aka: fire ladders) and fertilize trees with their droppings, all of which make trees more fire resilient.

7. Eco-Tourism:

Wild horses are American icons and treasured by over 100-million Americans. This love of American wild horses drives ecotourism in areas that have free-roaming wild horse herds, which helps bring revenues and jobs into such areas.

8. Sequestering Carbon:

Wild horses that graze grass and brush fuels are sequestering carbon compounds back into soils in their dung, which also incorporates the seeds of native plants, humus and microbiome, all of which restore and enrich soils, including fire-damaged soils. Reduces Need for Prescribed Burning:

Wild horses naturally grazing reduces the need for excessive prescribed burning of grass and brush, which sends millions of tons of carbon compounds into the atmosphere, accelerating climate change and ocean acidification. This also reduces the amount of toxins that impact air quality creating serious health issues.​

10. Soil Disturbance:

Wild horses evolved in North America 1.7-million years ago and are a co-evolved species to other North American flora and fauna. Even their hoof design is unique, which results in low-impact on soils. The body-weight of a horse, when calculated over the surface area of their hooves, yields a significantly lower ground-loading and compaction (in pounds per square inch; PSI) as opposed to cattle. Cattle have less hoof surface area in proportion to their body weight, which causes significant disruption of soils, which is bad for wilderness ecosystems. Therefore, the best species of herbivore for wildfire-grazing in ecologically sensitive designated wilderness areas is without doubt the wild horse.

11. Erosion, Flora, Fauna and Fisheries:

Wild horses naturally maintain native species cover crops, which are important to the survival of co-evolved dependent fauna. Science shows that maintaining cover crops also helps to prevent soil erosion. The opposite is true when fire (prescribed or natural) strips-off a cover crop resulting in high levels of erosion and loss of water infiltration into aquifers. Post-wildfire erosion in late fall and early winter causes abnormal erosion of clay and silt sediments that damage the spawning grounds and cover fish eggs, which adversely impacts native species fisheries. Excess sediment can profoundly effect the productivity of a salmon or trout stream (Cordone and Kelly, 1961)

12. Reestablishing Deer and Elk Populations:

Published peer-reviewed science shows that wild horses and deer are ‘commensal’, which means they don’t take forage from each-other. In fact, the grazing overlap between deer and wild horses is only 1%. While cattle and deer have a 4% grazing overlap. The rewilding (and relocating) of wild horses into designated wilderness areas where deer and elk are currently suffering from collapsed populations, provides additional natural prey for apex predators (part of Natural Selection), which takes some of the depredation pressures off deer and elk, thereby rebalancing ecosystems.

06/15/2026

Don't be bashful! SHARE!
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Images and video by Michelle Gough and Wild Horse Fire Brigade. Narrated by William Simpson II

This music video shows just a very few of the horses in Our Cultural Heritage Herd of 200. Our Herd is unique in the entire U.S.! It is the ONLY free-roaming, naturally living herd in a balanced natural ecosystem where they graze over the fossils of their ancestors who survived the Ice Age! SPECIAL!

WOW! Our own cowboy -- Wild Horse Researcher William Simpson II is rockin the folks over at Super FM 92.7 in Lagos Niger...
06/15/2026

WOW! Our own cowboy -- Wild Horse Researcher William Simpson II is rockin the folks over at Super FM 92.7 in Lagos Nigeria!! Holy Smokes!

William's new song 'Wild Horse Grift' was recently distributed on all steaming media platforms (Spotify, iTunes, Amazon, etc.)

If you love Country Music and horses, UR gonna love this song!

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URGENT SHARE!! **America Is Repeating Brazil’s Amazon Disaster — While Systematically Destroying the Only Animal That Co...
06/14/2026

URGENT SHARE!! **America Is Repeating Brazil’s Amazon Disaster — While Systematically Destroying the Only Animal That Could Prevent It**

By: William Simpson II

For decades, Brazil has been rightly condemned around the world for burning vast tracts of the Amazon rainforest to create more pasture for cattle. The results have been catastrophic: massive biodiversity loss, destruction of Indigenous lands, enormous carbon releases, and the steady degradation of one of the planet’s most vital ecosystems. Cattle ranching accounts for approximately 80% of deforestation in the Amazon.

What few Americans understand is that our own federal land management agencies — the USDA Forest Service and the Department of the Interior — have been pursuing a remarkably similar strategy right here in the United States.

In 2019, I publicly challenged the Department of the Interior’s heavy reliance on prescribed burning as a primary fuel-reduction tool, noting that this approach mirrors the destructive cycle of clearing and burning forests to favor livestock production — exactly what Brazil has done at industrial scale.

The core problem is both simple and profound: invasive ruminant livestock (cattle and sheep) are among the worst species that can be introduced into a forest or wilderness ecosystem, while America’s only remaining non-ruminant native herbivore — the wild horse — is the best suited for the job. Yet current federal policy aggressively promotes the former and systematically removes the latter.

Unlike wild horses, cattle and sheep are ruminants whose digestive systems destroy most seeds. They compact fragile soils, damage riparian zones, spread invasive weeds, and overgraze vegetation that evolved under different grazing patterns. In designated wilderness areas — lands Congress set aside to remain largely natural — introducing or expanding domestic livestock represents a serious ecological mismatch.

For more than twelve years, I have lived among and studied a herd of approximately 200 free-roaming cultural-heritage wild horses using what I call the “Goodall Method.” I have documented that wild horses function as superior ecosystem engineers. As hindgut fermenters, they pass viable seeds and beneficial microbiome in their droppings, naturally reseeding wildfire-damaged landscapes, stabilizing soils, and reducing post-fire erosion that would otherwise choke mountain streams and destroy spawning gravels for trout and salmon. In simple terms: wild horses “mow the lawn, fertilize it, and reseed it,” creating thriving conditions that benefit deer, elk, rabbits, pollinators, and countless other native species.

The current management approach is not only ecologically misguided — it is fiscally corrupt in its priorities. Analyses of U.S. Forest Service budgets show that suppression costs have consumed over 50% of the agency’s budget in recent years, while hazardous fuels reduction (prevention) receives a much smaller share. This structure creates a perverse incentive: the agency is better funded and politically supported when fires burn than when they are prevented. In effect, wildfire has been monetized, with suppression contractors and bureaucratic overhead benefiting far more than the land or the public.

Compounding this failure, certain so-called wild horse nonprofits — including American Wild Horse Conservation (also known as American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign) — are under contract with the Bureau of Land Management and receive taxpayer funding to assist in fertility control programs. Public records show a Cooperative Agreement (FAIN L23AC00413) between the Department of the Interior and American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign for $217,549 to support wild horse and b***o resource management activities, including fertility control implementation. This creates a clear conflict of interest in which organizations ostensibly dedicated to protecting wild horses are financially compensated by the very agency whose policies many believe are driving those horses toward managed decline through chemical sterilization.

By actively promoting and facilitating the widespread use of PZP immunocontraception — a vaccine formulated with powerful adjuvants such as modified Freund’s Complete Adjuvant, which is known to cause painful and persistent injection-site reactions including abscesses, granulomas, and chronic inflammation in treated horses — these organizations are not only compromising the long-term genetic health and viability of wild horse populations but are also actively blocking the only proven, nature-based solution capable of meaningfully reducing catastrophic wildfire fuels across western landscapes.

The Wild Horse Fire Brigade plan would relocate wild horses from areas of economic conflict into ecologically suitable wilderness areas, where their grazing would reduce fine fuels and moderate fire behavior without adding more toxic smoke. By opposing or failing to support such rewilding initiatives in favor of continued sterilization programs that keep horses off the land or in holding facilities, these groups are directly contributing to the conditions that produce more megafires and the toxic smoke responsible for tens of thousands of premature American deaths every year. In this way, they are monetizing a national public health and ecological crisis in much the same manner as the U.S. Forest Service has monetized wildfire through its budget priorities that favor suppression over prevention.

At the same time, federal policy continues its aggressive campaign against America’s wild horses — the one large-bodied herbivore perfectly adapted to function effectively in these sensitive wilderness landscapes. Through helicopter roundups, long-term off-range warehousing, and aggressive chemical fertility control, the agencies have removed tens of thousands of wild horses from the very places where they could provide the greatest benefit.

My own documentation during the 2018 Klamathon Fire proved the concept in real time. Areas grazed by wild horses created natural fuel breaks that slowed the fire’s advance, protected parts of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument, and helped safeguard nearby communities including the college town of Ashland, Oregon. These observations validated predictions I had made on camera two months earlier in the documentary Fuel, Fire and Wild Horses.

Instead of scaling this proven, low-cost, nature-based solution, the agencies continue to treat wild horses as a problem to be eliminated rather than the ally they truly are.

The human cost of this failed management is measured in tens of thousands of premature deaths every year from toxic wildfire smoke, hundreds of billions of dollars in annual economic damage, and the irreversible degradation of our forests, watersheds, and wildlife habitat.

A landmark UCLA study published in the journal Science Advances found that between 2008 and 2018, wildfire smoke PM2.5 caused between 52,480 and 55,710 premature deaths in California alone — an average of roughly 5,000 premature deaths per year in just one state — with an associated economic cost of $432 billion to $456 billion. More recent research published by the American Chemical Society in December 2025 further revealed that wildland fires emit significantly more harmful organic compounds and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) than previously estimated — increasing the toxicity profile of wildfire smoke well beyond what current models account for.

This is not the result of climate change alone. It is the predictable outcome of policies that favor special interests and suppression budgets over ecological reality and public safety.
America does not need to keep repeating Brazil’s mistake. We already have the right animal for the job — the wild horse — and the real-world evidence to support its careful rewilding in appropriate wilderness areas.

What we lack is the political courage to move beyond outdated, livestock-biased management and embrace science-based, nature-aligned solutions.

The current management of America’s public forests and wilderness areas is not merely ineffective. It is ecologically illiterate, economically wasteful, and morally indefensible.
It is long past time for a fundamental course correction.

References
1. Simpson, William E. “Rancher, Logger, Author and Naturalist William E. Simpson II Disagrees with DOI’s Plan of Burning America.” PR.com, August 28, 2019. https://www.pr.com/press-release/792917
2. Connolly, Rachel, et al. “Mortality attributable to PM2.5 from wildland fires in California from 2008 to 2018.” Science Advances, 7 June 2024. https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adl1252
3. UCLA Newsroom. “The death toll from wildfire smoke.” June 7, 2024. https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/the-death-toll-from-wildfire-smoke
4. Huang, Lyuyin, et al. “Fires could emit more air pollution than previously estimated.” Environmental Science & Technology (American Chemical Society), December 2025. https://www.acs.org/pressroom/presspacs/2025/december/fires-could-emit-more-air-pollution-than-previously-estimated.html
5. “Could Wild Horses Help Fight Wildfires?” Reasons to be Cheerful, 16 February 2024. https://reasonstobecheerful.world/could-wild-horses-help-fight-wildfires/
6. “Wild horse fire brigade: lessons in rebalancing North American ecosystems by rewilding equids.” GrazeLIFE, 1 November 2019. https://grazelife.com/blog/wild-horse-fire-brigade-lessons-in-rebalancing-north-american-ecosystems-by-rewilding-equids/
7. “Meet the man who says wild horses could help prevent the next wildfire.” NPR, 23 October 2022. https://www.npr.org/2022/10/23/1130782366/meet-the-man-who-says-wild-horses-could-help-prevent-the-next-wildfire
8. “How Wildfires Are Burning through the U.S. Forest Service Budget.” American Forests, 13 August 2015. https://www.americanforests.org/article/how-wildfires-are-burning-through-the-u-s-forest-service-budget/
9. National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) and U.S. Forest Service budget justifications (various years, including suppression vs. hazardous fuels reduction data).
10. Simpson, William E. Field documentation and observations during the 2018 Klamathon Fire (on-record with CALFIRE and documented in multiple publications and the documentary Fuel, Fire and Wild Horses).
11. U.S. Department of the Interior / Bureau of Land Management. Cooperative Agreement FAIN L23AC00413 with American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign (American Wild Horse Conservation), $217,549 for Wild Horse and B***o Resource Management (including fertility control programs), August 7, 2023 – September 30, 2025. Public record via USASpending.gov.

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr Doug Burgum Shawn Ryan Show Shawn Ryan The Wilderness Society Help Alberta Wildies Society Sierra Club Sierra Club Foundation 7News DC Los Angeles Times @

06/14/2026

SHARE! 🚨 William E. Simpson II: Wild Horses Could Save Lake Tahoe & Eliminate the Need for Glyphosate

What if one of the most effective wildfire prevention systems already exists in nature?

William E. Simpson II joins Michael Jaco to expose how wild horses naturally reduce dangerous wildfire fuel loads while helping restore ecological balance — potentially eliminating the need for toxic glyphosate spraying near sensitive regions like Lake Tahoe.

This conversation uncovers the connection between wildfire disasters, environmental toxins, ecosystem destruction, public health concerns, and why natural solutions continue being overlooked while chemical-based systems expand.

William explains how wild horses historically managed grasslands and forests by consuming vegetation that becomes explosive wildfire fuel during dry seasons. Instead of working with nature, many modern land management programs continue relying on herbicides, costly mechanical clearing, and approaches that critics argue are failing to solve the underlying problem.

The deeper this discussion goes, the more it raises major questions about wildfire policy, environmental stewardship, and why catastrophic fires continue escalating year after year.

The episode also explores the growing health risks connected to wildfire smoke exposure and how restoring natural grazing systems could reduce environmental damage while creating economic opportunities through ecosystem restoration, tourism, and wildfire mitigation.

This is one of those conversations that completely changes how you think about wildfire prevention, land management, and humanity’s relationship with the natural world.

🎥 Watch the full video here:
https://youtube.com/live/K2KC1-pjZbg

🐎 Wild Horse Fire Brigade:
https://www.wildhorsefirebrigade.org

🌿 Horses of Nature:
https://horseofnature.com

📖 UCLA Study on Wildfire Smoke Death Toll:
https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/the-death-toll-from-wildfire-smoke

🎥 Rewilding Horses & Wildfire Prevention:
https://www.ambest.com/video/video.aspx?s=1&rc=wildhorses323

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06/12/2026

BFFs — Best Friends Forever! 💕🐴

The beautiful importance of mutual grooming in wild horse society.

In this sweet video, two adorable 2-month-old filly foals share a tender grooming session — a vital social behavior that strengthens bonds, maintains hygiene, and reinforces the tight-knit family structure within the band.

These young fillies are part of our cultural-heritage herd of 200 horses living naturally, wild and free at Wild Horse Ranch. Generation after generation, they graze across the same ancient landscapes where their ancestors once roamed in vast numbers across North America. Even today, their hooves pass over fossils of their distant predecessors. As Siskiyou County Agricultural Commissioner James Smith has noted, numerous horse fossils have been found in the Tule Lake area.

Video narration by William Simpson II — founder of Wild Horse Fire Brigade and a leading expert in wild horse behavioral ecology and ethology. For over 12 years, William has conducted more than 25,000 hours of immersive, close-range observation with this specific herd. Accepted as one of their own, he studies them using what he has coined the “Goodall Method” — a long-term embedded observational approach inspired by Dr. Jane Goodall’s pioneering work with chimpanzees. Dr. Goodall was aware of William’s use of this term before her passing.

This rare, trust-based research provides deep insights into the true natural behaviors, social dynamics, and ecology of wild horses — knowledge that can benefit management, conservation, and our understanding of all equines.

06/07/2026

NEW LIFE at Wild Horse Ranch! It’s TINY Baby GIRL! 🐴💕

SHARE if you love baby horses!

In this heartwarming video narrated by our founder William Simpson II, a proud mare gently cares for her day-old filly foal, surrounded by part of our herd of 200 cultural-heritage wild horses living naturally, wild and free in their wilderness ecosystem.

At Wild Horse Ranch, these horses have full access to the rich “medicine chest” of co-evolved native plants and botanicals they instinctively use for health and healing. William Simpson II has documented that when wild horses are removed from this natural pharmacy and placed into confined or artificial environments — even large pastures — they lose the exceptional vitality and resilience they maintain in the wild.

Equally vital to herd health are the co-evolved apex predators that share this ecosystem. Through Natural Selection, these predators help maintain the genetic vigor and long-term sustainability of wild horse herds — and other native herbivores — by removing the weak and sick. Ultimately, this also keeps populations in balance with other species and resources, including managing grass and brush wildfire fuels.

William Simpson II is the leading expert in wild horse behavioral ecology. For the past 12+ years he has lived among this herd day and night, year-round, in all seasons — more than 25,000 hours of immersive study. Using what he calls the “Goodall Method,” he has been accepted by the horses as one of their own. Few researchers in the world can make that claim.

This is what real, on-the-ground wild horse research and conservation look like. William and his partner Michelle who is part indigenous American (Cherokee-Choctaw) have a vast collection of videos (hundreds) and over 500,000 photos of naturally-living wild horses in Our Herd.

Our Herd is exceptionally well documented via this extensive photographic record going back 12-years. The herd has NOT doubled in size every 4-years because it's in balance with the entire ecosystem. Every year, the herd loses 8-12 horses due to old-age. Still other horses are 'selected' by Mother Natures' predators for removal. This is why having a healthy crop of new foals each year is critical for sustainable herd size and genetic diversity. In Our Herd of 200 horses, we need at least 40-50 foals born each year for these reasons. This is how Nature, not humankind, kept wild horses as a vibrant species for nearly 2-million years.

Sadly, now more meddling by the *Sterilization Cult (*people and nonprofits promoting PZP) adds to the genetic damage inflicted by the Bureau of Land Management and their reckless management of treasured American wild horses.

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr

"🎶 New Release Alert! 'Wild Horse Grift' by William Simpson SHARE the music inspired by Wild Horses!WILD HORSE FIRE BRIG...
06/07/2026

"🎶 New Release Alert! 'Wild Horse Grift' by William Simpson

SHARE the music inspired by Wild Horses!

WILD HORSE FIRE BRIGADE is now live on Apple Music / iTunes.

A powerful country anthem exposing the grift in wild horse advocacy.

William has generously directed that All streaming revenues from his music go towards saving Wild Horses in perpetuity.

Stream or buy here:
https://music.apple.com/us/artist/william-simpson-wild-horse-fire-brigade/1853719677

Ella Langley

Listen to music by William Simpson WILD HORSE FIRE BRIGADE on Apple Music.

"🎶 New Release! 'Wild Horse Grift' by William Simpson WILD HORSE FIRE BRIGADE is now live on Spotify. Share the music wr...
06/07/2026

"🎶 New Release! 'Wild Horse Grift' by William Simpson WILD HORSE FIRE BRIGADE is now live on Spotify.

Share the music written by a cowboy-researcher living among wild horses!

A hard-hitting country anthem calling out the grift in wild horse advocacy.

William has generously directly all streaming revenues from all his music towards saving American Wild Horses, in perpetuity.

Listen here: https://open.spotify.com/album/7lxnHqpVHzOAWcstVjQBfN

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Artist · 23 monthly listeners.

Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD), Ecosystem Imbalance from Livestock Grazing & Predator Removal, and the Role of Native Wil...
06/05/2026

Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD), Ecosystem Imbalance from Livestock Grazing & Predator Removal, and the Role of Native Wild Horses as a Natural Mitigation Tool

By Capt. William E. Simpson II, USMM (Ret.)
Founder & Executive Director, Wild Horse Fire Brigade (WHFB)
Ethologist & Naturalist – 12+ Years Immersive Study of Free-Roaming Cultural-Heritage Wild Horses

June 5, 2026

Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is a fatal prion disease affecting deer, elk, moose, and other cervids. It is 100% lethal in infected animals, with prions persisting in the environment (soil, vegetation, urine, f***s, saliva) for years. The CDC and USGS document its rapid spread across 37+ U.S. states, with heavy concentrations in the western and central U.S. — precisely overlapping dense BLM livestock grazing allotments.

CWD Map (CDC data - SEE IMAGE)

BLM manages approximately 155 million acres of livestock grazing allotments across western states. These high-density grazing zones align closely with CWD hotspots in Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Montana, Idaho, and parts of California, Nevada, and New Mexico. (See BLM rangeland health and grazing allotment maps for visual overlap.)

Predator Removal Amplifies the Problem

USDA Wildlife Services and ranchers have intensively removed co-evolved predators (cougars, wolves, bears, coyotes) that naturally target sick and weakened prey. Peer-reviewed science shows this removal increases CWD prevalence:

*Brandell et al. (2022/2023) in the Journal of Animal Ecology: Selective predation by wolves and cougars can significantly reduce CWD prevalence.

*Uehlinger et al. (2016) systematic review: Predators lower CWD spread by removing infected individuals before they shed large amounts of prions. Studies in Colorado show mountain lions preferentially prey on CWD-positive deer.

Dense livestock grazing combined with predator removal creates ideal conditions for prion amplification via contaminated forage shared across public lands.

Human and Livestock Risks

CWD prions are transmitted via contaminated forage. The parallels to Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE / “Mad Cow Disease”) are concerning — one infected cow can trigger the destruction of entire herds. Potential links to human Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) via contaminated venison remain under study, with experts urging caution. Prions are extremely resistant to standard disinfection methods.

Wild Horses: Resistant Grazers & Ecosystem Engineers

In my published article “OPINION: Wild Horses & Chronic Wasting Disease in Deer” (Pagosa Daily Post, January 18, 2021), I wrote:
“Native species American wild horses evolved on the North American continent about 55 million years ago... Of great interest is the fact that wild horses have an evolved resistance to this prion disease, and their grazing of wilderness areas may... help curtail the spread of CWD disease to other native herbivores.”

Dr. Mark Zabel of the Prion Research Center at Colorado State University stated in an official letter:

“While prion diseases affect many mammalian species, scientists have shown that equine species are extremely resistant to prion disease. This observation supports the idea of deploying wild horses into CWD endemic habitats to graze and consume a potentially significant source of environmental CWD prions, preventing consumption by CWD susceptible cervids.”

This is further supported in our 2018 EnviroNews discussion. No natural cases of prion disease have been reported in horses. As keystone herbivores with Ice Age roots, wild horses offer a low-impact, nature-based solution: reducing prion loads in the environment while also mitigating wildfire fuels through grazing.

Call to Action

The current model of overstocked livestock grazing, predator eradication, and wild horse removals ignores Nature’s design.

Ranchers, land managers, and policymakers must wake up. Restoring natural balance through predator protection where appropriate, reducing overstocking, and integrating wild horse rewilding pilots represents a smarter, science-backed path forward.

Sources & Related Reading:

Pagosa Daily Post (Jan 18, 2021): https://pagosadailypost.com/2021/01/18/opinion-wild-horses-chronic-wasting-disease-in-deer/
EnviroNews (Feb 27, 2018): https://www.environews.tv/022718-wild-horses-may-hold-solution-slowing-spread-fatal-chronic-wasting-disease-deer-elk/

Additional peer-reviewed studies: Brandell et al., Uehlinger et al., and CSU Prion Research.

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr Doug Burgum U.S. Department of Agriculture BLM Wild Horse & B***o Program U.S. Department of the Interior Shawn Ryan News5 Jr. Jess Harris Siskiyou County Supervisor District 1 KOBI-TV NBC5 KDRV NewsWatch 12

06/03/2026

DIY HORSEY TRUCK REPAIR - OR -- SOMETHING ELSE?

SHARE and help others to learn... Share into horse groups!

Truck repair is never fun... But when your assisted by a wild Mare and her yearling c**t, it's hilarious...

Danny, the yearling c**t is totally interested in any of the mechanical projects that William does around the ranch. And today was no exception.

After living with the herd as ONE with them for 12-years, they have learned to trust William Simpson II as if he's just another horse. But don't be fooled... they are on a hair-trigger and can bolt instantly when a threat is sensed. William has learned some of the sensory signals that they respond to, and most often, he can predict an oncoming event and avoid injury. These skills take many years to develop, and can only be developed by living among and being with the wild Ones for many years, as William has...

William makes it look effortless, but there's a lot going-on the camera can't detect. One of the most important unseen and undetected things is the continuous biofield energy (communication) exchange between William and the horses...

Equine assisted therapy is just scratching the surface of what equine biofield energy & communication is all about... William and Michelle live in the ecosystem of that equine energy in their ancient habitat...

*** Real Science Runs Ahead of Academia — Wild Horses Are Proving It ***

For over 12 years and 25,000+ hours, William has lived as a full member of a free-roaming wild horse herd in a mountain wilderness on the OR-CA border. What he has witnessed — profound mutual grooming that goes far beyond hygiene, synchronized resting states, instant herd-wide awareness, and apparent non-local energetic communication — cannot be fully explained by conventional sensory cues alone.

>> This is living biofield science in action

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