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Wild Horses Under Threat of Extinction

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By DonnaCSmith


The Corolla Wild Horses

 

The Corolla wild horses are one of several herds of free-roaming horses that live on the coast of North Carolina. They are descendents of Spanish horses brought to the New World in the sixteenth century as "disposable land transportation." The horses were left behind and have fended for themselves for 400 years. It's only been in recent years that they've needed a lot of help from their friends. A burst of development has eaten away at their grazing land and brought such danger as speeding vehicles, toxic garbage, and tourists.

Members of Corolla Wild Horse Fund have fought a valiant fight to keep their herd of wild horses safe. They built a fence across the island and herded the horses to what they hoped was a safe refuge - far from traffic and curious tourists. But the horses seem to be constantly under threat from the human population spreading up the Outer Banks. Several were shot and killed in recent years. Some wander back down into town by swimming around the fence on the sound-side, again endangering themselves in the traffic along highway twelve.

The area where the horses' range is sparsely dotted with beach houses; but is only accessible by four-wheel-drive vehicles or on foot. Except for the maniacs with guns, they are living peacefully, grazing among the dunes and showing themselves to fisher folk on the beach from time to time.


Endangered Once Again

But, once again the Corolla Wild Horses are being threatened by progress. I received the following email from Karen H. McCalpin, Executive Director of Corolla Wild Horse Fund:

"I wanted to make you aware of two very serious threats to the continued existence of the wild horses of Corolla. The first is the possibility of a genetic collapse and extinction if USFWS gets their way. You can read more at http://www.corollawildhorses.com/genetic_crisis.html . . .You can read about this at http://www.northernouterbanks.blogspot.com/ . Anything that you can do to help spread the word would be deeply appreciated. Letters to the legislators would be very effective as well as signing the online petition. Below is information that went out to our volunteers.

"Unfortunately we are going to have to postpone the October 11 Legislative/Media event until spring. Due to the national economic crisis, upcoming election and many other competing events, the key politicians and some of the speakers that we need to support this issue publicly are not able to attend. I will let you know when it is rescheduled. If you would like to weigh in on this issue and haven't already done so, please go to our website and sign our online petition. Adding comments helps the petition carry more weight. If you get a message about contributing to i petitions, just click on "no" at the bottom of the box. Please share this with everyone you know. If you would like to see who else has signed and what they have written, click on the signatures tab. The next meeting of the Wild Horse Advisory Board (USFWS, NCERR, Currituck County, CWHF, Betty Lane and Connie Johnson) is October 15, 1:00 p.m. at the Corolla Library. The meeting is open to the public and I will again be requesting an amendment to the herd size.

Also, if you are not already aware of it, there is a move to amend the Unified Development Ordinance to allow commercial development in the 4-wheel drive area. If the genetic issue does not push the wild horses to extinction, this surely will. It is scheduled for the November 17 BOC meeting. If ever there was a time to speak up for the horses - this is it - not after they are gone. First commercialization, then - a road."

Now, I realize this sounds like a local problem to those of you who are not North Carolina residents. But, maybe not. See these horses are part of our American Heritage, not just North Carolina's. These horses are descended from Spanish mustangs brought to the new world in the sixteenth century. They are the horses that carried explorers into the New World, helped colonists transport goods and plow fields, and provide sport. They are the root stock of the American Quarter Horse. They exemplify fortitude, strength and survival as they have been living under the harsh conditions of the sandy islands of the Outer Banks for four hundred years. Hurricanes, nor-easters, eating nothing but tough marsh grass and drinking brackish water. It seems a shame after all that they will succumb to what we call progress.

The Northern Outer Banks Blogspot sums it up best, "The Northern Outer Banks are pristine and unspoiled. From the end of the paved road to the Virginia line, residents, property owners, and visitors enjoy unspoiled nature, wildlife, amazing beaches, and peaceful serenity.

Proposals for commercial development in the four-wheel-drive area are threatening the pristine environment, this great asset of Currituck County, and the general safety and welfare of the community. Development happens. But the way we manage this development makes all the difference. Don't we have enough proof in over developed areas throughout the world! The county's decisions and plans for controlled, responsible growth impact safety and security of all visitors and residents, including the environment."

Comments

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Ellie  says:
15 months ago

How very sad but it appears that there are people who genuinely care about the fate of these horses. The problem is that humans are encroaching upon what was their territory and one assumes that there is less and less grazing land for them. Politicians don't react as a rule unless constituents put pressure to intervene. Hopefully, something can be done to save them before it's too late and another case of "would-have, could-have, should-have."

Another great piece, donnalee and thanks for the heads-up.

starcatchinfo profile image

starcatchinfo  says:
15 months ago

HI DonnaCSmith...... Its very sad , but genuine people are there to take care of these horses.

Rochelle Frank profile image

Rochelle Frank  says:
15 months ago

Interesting that oxic garbage and tourists are on the same list. Four-wheel drive toys should be endangered.

DonnaCSmith profile image

DonnaCSmith  says:
15 months ago

Don't tell the fishermen that. Four-wheel drive is the only way to navigate the beaches, and there are some houses, etc there. I think the few SUVs that travel up the beach are producing much less emissions that the traffic that will be on the paved hwy when they extend it to the state line. Progress is a dilemma, that's for sure.

My grand daughter had it all figured out when she was little - "Memaw, I think they should get rid of all the cars and roads and ride horses everywhere."

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