The Eastern Sierra~

Got slammed with 111 inches of snow in the most recent 5 day storm.

UC Berkeley’s Snow Lab records this as the snowiest 5 day stretch in 40 years.

But the Sierras are once again,

silent,

still,

serene.

Even the twin waterfalls are sleeping!

Life perseveres, waiting for spring thaw.

The White Mountains (in the back), are home to the few surviving California herds of wild mustangs who are now going to be captured and removed by helicopter roundup and bait water trapping. See prior post on these magnificent wild creatures and their keystone place in the wild habitat:

The US Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management are moving forward with plans to capture and remove approximately 500 wild horses from their home near Mono Lake in California’s Eastern Sierra. The mustangs have lived here since the 1800’s. The Forest Service and BLM claim the horses are a danger on roads and disturb sensitive habitats.

Interestingly, cattle are allowed to graze in much of this “sensitive habitat.” Reports indicate wild mustangs are consuming habitat allocated for privately owned cattle. In more than 50 years I have never seen a wild mustang on a road, and neither have my friends and family, some whom live in the area, and had no idea they were even here.

https://americanwildhorse.org

https://www.easternsierrawildhorses.com

Cheers to you from The Eastern Sierra and her not long remaining, wild & free mustangs~


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250 thoughts on “The Eastern Sierra~

      1. Couldn’t agree more! And so long as you’re not breaking your neck on it after it becomes compacted and freezes over, becoming a lethal ice rink to negotiate walking on!
        I’m good thanks, though this is one of my most challenging times right now! I hope everything is going great for you, you deserve it! 😀

  1. Such beautiful images, Cindy. Snow covered mountains are so majestic. What a shame that they are going to round up and move the wild mustangs. Money talks and the ranchers probably have a lot to do with it.

    1. I love your outrage Gigi. I feel just the same. Senseless. Cruel. Selfish. I hope the courts stop them but I am not holdling my breath. The US has done an excellent job of slaughtering our wild horse and burro populations. Stay safe and well my friend დ

  2. What stunningly beautiful photos and what heart-breakingly awful news about the mustangs. Does sound like some powerful cattle-grazing folks are prevailing in a perilous political tussle…

    1. Hi there Will. Great to hear from you. Cattle owners and BLM in kahoots? Not exactly surprising is it, but still sad for the mustangs. Thanks so much for your thoughtful words & cheers დ

  3. It is not the mustangs that are interfering with our lives, but we, humans, are invading their habitat.
    This year the snow is everywhere in huge amount. It is beautiful to watch through the window, but to much cleaning 🙂
    Welcome back, Cindy. Probably, snow made your way back to WP too long. Lol…

    1. Many will probably die. They will be sold or given away to whomever takes them. Purposely slaughtering wild horses is illegal in the US, so they may enter the “slaughter pipeline” which ships wild horses to Mexico or Canada (Alberta) for slaughter and sale to Japan. Several regions in Japan consider horse meat a delicacy. As usual, follow the money and one will find the explanations. These wild horse families will experience this very soon unless the lawsuits to stop this are successful. I hope you are well my friend and sorry to be a bummer დ

      1. It’s all right, one can’t ignore reality. This is unbelievable… (Horse meat is also still consumed a bit in France…) How can such a massive slaughter be permissible on the flimsy excuse that they cause accidents with cars?
        There must be other parts of the US with wild roaming horses?
        Greed… 😡

        1. The US has approx. 83K wild horses. Australia, which is a role model for wild horse protection and management has 400K. The US, helo-rounded up or trapped, (with injuries, and sometines death), almost 12K wild horses in 2024 alone, as just one example. We are even worse with wild burros. The BLM created an ‘adoption’ incentive program for the rounded up mustangs in 2019 in which ‘adopters’ can pay as little as $25 to purchase a wild mustang, who then typically sell them for 1K. Hundreds of these adopted mustangs end up in “kill pens,” ready for transfer to the ‘slaugher pipeline,” to be shipped out of country and killed. In 2022, as one example, 1,020 federally protected wild horses and burros were sold at known slaughter auctions over a 22-month period. A bit confusing, ‘sold for adoption’, but sold to slaughter houses. It is sad and ironic that these magnificent wild mustangs are icons of the American West, and Native Americans in particular. I think what bugs me most is the deception, calling slaugher adoption.

  4. Anonymous

    Can’t imagine the snow…we had one brief flurry this year. Sad about the mustangs having to leave that beautiful landscape.

    1. Yes. The mid-California Sierras often gets the most annual snow fall in the lower 48. It’s serious in the winter and I agree with you. Very, very sad for the mustangs დ

  5. The images are beautiful. As for the poor horses… It is the people who have had one or two issues that have complained – the squeaky wheels that are getting the ‘grease’. Someone or group must have money to spare to get such a project – another uneeded project underway that everyone else will have to pay for.

    As with other populations of animals – maybe culling the herd or preventing growth might have been a better and less expensive option? That is done with the “Assateague Island’s wild horses in Maryland are a free-roaming, feral population, likely descended from 17th-century settlers’ livestock. Located at Assateague Island National Seashore, they are managed by the National Park Service. These hardy animals live in, marshes, and beaches, feeding on salt-marsh grass.” You can read more about how that group of horses is handled by the National Park Service.

    It is too bad for the mustangs – I’m sure they aren’t doing the damage that has been asigned to them. But someones knickers were in a twist… And people do tend to over react to protect their own interests.

    1. Hi Jules! Great to hear from you. Thank you for caring about the mustangs. I do know about the wild horses on Assateague. They are a humanely managed herd in comparison to Cumberland Island wild horses for example that are unamanaged and face a harder/grimmer life and abbreviated life expectancy. The Montgomery Pass Wild horses are the only (or were the only) wild horse herd in America managed entirely by natural apex predator (mountain lion) predation. They are (or were) considered a unique and “ecologically effective” herd and are “self stablizing.” Now the mountain lions will be in trouble too. They will likely get shot or trapped if they start to eat the cattle. I don’t want to imagine the BLM/Forest Service decision making process around this issue but I know the cattle come first დ

  6. Every photo portrays so much beauty, so amazingly crisp and clean, Cindy, … ‘Tis wonderful to appreciate the natural state of being, … If you breathe out, one can imagine the moistness freezing instantly, … Sad to hear about the Mustangs, …it breaks your heart every time you hear of such decisions, … it seems some voices are ‘louder’ than others…. Take care and thank you for the uplifting vistas, …💙

    1. Thank you sincerely for such a thoughtful and beautiful comment. You make me happy that I posted. And, yes, “some voices are louder than others,” unfortunately. Your kindness is most appreciated Penny. Take good care & happy you stopped by დ

  7. WOW! What a view! These pictures look cold, but warmed our hearts. We feel sorry for the mustangs, it looks like ‘they’ wants to have control over effurrything😾 Glad you’re back, Cindy, we missed you😻Double Pawkisses for a warm and Happy Sunday🐾😙💞

  8. My teeth are cracking from the grinding of (justifying) more eradication of wild horses. It makes my heart hurt. I love seeing the snow in the sierra’s because the snow pack is vital. You just hate to see so much so fast. It’s stunning though.

  9. Pingback: The Eastern Sierra~ – charles french words reading and writing

  10. The beauty of the white, serene stillness is wonderful.

    The tale of the mustangs is just mind numbing. Do not understand why we can’t things right with animals.

    😤😭
    Peach

  11. Such exquisite photos of nature in its pristine self, Cindy and then the snow!!!….. Feel so sad that the mustangs are going to be removed from their natural habitat. So much blatant tinkering with nature for narrow selfish gains!!

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