Rio Grande Gorge, New Mexico
BLM
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT
Mimbres Black-on-White Bowl, New Mexico Lesser Prairie Chicken, New Mexico Rafting the Rio Grande, New Mexico Wild Horse, New Mexico Oil Rig, Oklahoma
New Mexico
BLM>New Mexico>Wild Horse & Burro Program
Print Page

Wild Horse and Burro Program

Taylor Benton of Midland, Texas, overall youth champion at the 2007 Expo, poses with her winning horse, Caira.

14th Annual Wild Horse & Burro Expo

October 9-12, Ardmore, Oklahoma

A weekend filled with fun, competition and an opportunity to adopt a "living legend!"

Click here for details

The public lands of the Western United States are diverse, ruggedly beautiful and majestic - as are the horses and burros that live there. These animals are born with the colors of the land upon them. The browns, blacks, reds, blues, dapple grays, and snowy whites all reflect nature's paint-brush.

As early as the 1600's, horses and burros were released by or escaped from Spanish explorers. As America's west was settled, additional horses and burros from American Indians, settlers, miners, ranchers and soldiers established the foundations of today's wild horse and burro herds. Wild herds like these symbolize our western heritage and pioneer spirit.

Today, America's wild horses and burros are found in 10 western states. It is the BLM's responsibility to preserve and protect healthy herds of wild, free-roaming horses and burros as components of the public lands. The Wild Horse Annie Act of 1959 and the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971 gave wild horses and burros a legal right to live on public lands without harassment. The Adopt-A-Horse or Burro Program was initiated in 1973 to meet the challenges of balancing the health of public lands with the health of the wild horses and burros.

BLM invites you to adopt a living legend!


 
 

Photo of Two Wild Horses

Adoption Schedule

Adopting a Horse or Burro:
Requirements, Regulations, Forms, Instructions

BLM National WH&B Web Site

BLM Internet Adoption Web Site

FAQs