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A photograph of nine Horse Block Sculptures by English/Italian equine artist Susan Leyland who is featured in the Fall 2024 issue of EquuStyle Art & Travel magazine. www.equustyle.com
Leyland's Signature Style, Horse Block Sculpture

Susan Leyland, born in UK,1952, has been living in Italy since 1978 .


Since 2000, Leyland has pursued her passion for Art and Horses, making horses her subject matter and elevating them to an expressive medium in her sculptures.  She searches for innovative solutions in both shape and composition.


Susan Leyland is known for her signature style, Horse Block Sculpture, which is characterized by flowing horse shapes merging with rigorous geometric figures with straight and angled lines.





Equustyle: What are your most important sculptures?


Susan Leyland: A 1 1/2 life-size Public War Horse Memorial which stands on the roundabout in Ascot, UK, to recall the suffering of millions of horses, mules and donkeys during WW1. 2018


Describing the process of creating the work, in an article by ArtUK.org, Leyland said: "I spent four years from receiving the commission to finalising the bronze at Black Isle Foundry, Nairn, solemnly learning about the First World War, drawing more than 200 sketches, reading and searching the internet, so that the war was part of me to interpret and transfer feeling into the monument, not as an onlooker or outsider, and to be able to portray this solemn monument with the greatest dignity and esteem for those animals recalling their suffering and hardship."


The sculpture does not portray any type of breed or particular horse. It was made considering the human loss as well as other equines, mules and donkeys.


An installation I designed and modeled five life-size bronze horses that pull the chariot of the Sun God Helios was installed at SunWorld Bà Nà Hills Resort, in Dà Nang, Vietnam. in 2020. Grand Cascade is a cluster of more than 40 artistic sculptures with the theme of ancient Greek mythology.


According to the writer of “Bà Nà Hills Launches New Project Grand Cascade on April 30-May”in Vietnam Insider, Leyland’s sculpture is “The most prominent in the ensemble of golden statues at Grand Cascade is the central cluster of statues at the fountain, where the sun god Helios controls the chariot pulled by five steeds. Viewed from afar, viewers have the feeling that the horse’s hooves are pedaling the waves, flying, leaping forward.”


Equustyle: How did your upbringing in the UK influence you and subsequently your art?


Susan Leyland: My upbringing in UK was a happy one. I was born in Whiston, Lancashire in 1952 and grew up in England near Cambridge. My grandfather gifted me a pony at the age of 4, establishing my bond with horses. I liked to draw and paint from an early age and usually horses but only later in life discovered sculpture.


My  first drawing and sculpture exhibitions where held in 1998 and 1999. One year later, in 2000, I held a solo show in Saratoga Springs, NY. The success of these exhibitions led me to take up sculpting full-time.


Susan Leyland, artist and sculptor in her studio in Tuscany.  equustyle.com
Susan Leyland, artist and sculptor in her studio

Equustyle:  Where do you work?


Susan Leyland: I work quietly and long hours in my Tuscan studio, an old stable, in the olive but I also love the excitement of travelling, exhibitions and meeting people. I have just returned from UK where my bronze and clay sculptures were exhibited at Gallery 8, St James’s, London, where six sculptures found new collectors.


Equustyle:  What is the process behind your sculpture?


Susan Leyland: I search for new ideas and elaborate the ideas by drawing and study sketching. I am inspired to explore and experiment, searching expression in innovative form from what I see and feel within.


I begin with a design, decide the size, make the base, the horses are then added and the forms take shape. Work on a sculpture can take a week to two months, depending on the size and the number of horses. The piece has to completely dry out before firing which can take another month. The sculpture is fired in a furnace for a week reaching over 1000 degrees



Equustyle:  What materials and techniques do you use for your sculptures?


Susan Leyland: I work in a coarse semi refractory water based clay, difficult to work with but beautiful and resistant to breakages when fired. I also work in other materials such as wax, non water based clays, polystyrene for enlargements, and in bronze.



Equustyle:  Who are your clients and where can people see your work?


Susan Leyland: My clients are from countries world wide, art lovers as horse lovers alike. My work can be found in the UK, USA, Canada, Thailand, China, Australia, Italy, Russia, Sweden, France, Germany, Switzerland, Portugal, Asia and Arab countries.


My work can be seen in Italy at the Barbara Paci Gallery, Forte dei Marmi & Pietrasanta, the Brancacci Gallery, Florence and in Germany the Kunstgalerie Bech. My work is represented worldwide by Alan Kluckow Fine Art, Sunningdale, UK. She exhibits in the UK with The Country House & Stables Gallery, the Osborne Studio Gallery and the Norton Way Gallery.


Recent exhibitions took place at Gallery 8 London and Country House & Stables, Berkshire UK.


Equustyle:  What are the best ways for potential clients to connect with you?


Susan Leyland: I would ask anyone interested to look at my website www.susanleyland.com and Instagram Susan Leyland, to be able to see and understand my work in more depth.

Direct contact can be made via email susan.leyland@gmail.com or Instagram Message.



More About Susan Leyland's Horse Block Sculptures


Susan Leyland is known worldwide for her Horse Block Sculpture. Her work is met with international acclaim by art collectors as well as horse lovers for their uniqueness in form and concept as well as for quality, harmony and beauty.


Horse Block Sculptures are of original aspect. Her horses blend with the bases creating a flow of shapes and negative spaces. The bases are often architectural, geometrical, pedestal like or they ground the work with simple rectangles, squares or spheres.


Leyland undertakes preparatory studies before starting to work on her sculptures. A clay sculpture can take two or more months to make depending on its size and complexity . When a sculpture is concluded there are precise drying times to follow, after which, when completely dry,  it is fired at MITAL terre-cotte works Impruneta.


Susan Leyland’s sculptures are unique and original pieces, modeled in a semi-refractory artistic clay or made in bronze and come with a certificate of authenticity.










Editor's Note: Sleeping Horse is a Horse Block Sculpture by Susan Leyland that I discovered over two years ago. I was immediately taken with the beauty and artistry of her equine sculptures.


Sleeping Horse by Susan Leyland a Horse Block Sculpture measuring 48x26x12 cm.  equustyle.com
Sleeping Horse by Susan Leyland

 
 

Updated: 6 days ago


A photograph of Carla Grace painting a large horse portrait titled "Envision" with oil on linen. equustyle.com
Painting "Envision" Oil on Linen 110cm x 130cm

EquuStyle: As an internationally-acclaimed, award-winning, realistic wildlife artist, can you share the story of your artistic journey?


Carla Grace: I have been on an artistic journey my whole life without realising it. I never wanted to become an artist, but once I started studying at university, I quickly realised that I didn’t want to do anything else.


In hindsight, I began my career at 14 when I sold my first painting and won a major school art prize. I spent many years throughout my childhood in different parts of Africa, which is where my passion for wildlife came from. We were living in Zambia when I started to earnestly pursue my skillset in pencil portraits, doing commissions for pocket money from the age of 17. I even had a waiting list at that age, and so figured I would end up doing something with my skills eventually.


I trained myself hard in those early years, often staying home when others were out being social. Even during university, where I studied fine art for two years before dropping out, I was doing art on the side for extra cash. When I dropped out of uni and moved to Australia at age 23, I dedicated myself to setting up my art business and pursing it as a full time career. It then took me 4 years to make that a reality as I slowly transitioned away from a supplementary full-time job, to doing more and more art, until finally it was my full-time career.


EquuStyle: Which piece are you most proud of, and what’s the story behind it?


Carla Grace: I am most proud of a very large scale painting of flamingos I did in 2023, and a large scale white on white painting of a horse entangled in fabric completed at the start of this year. Both of these pieces are significant in that they were made up from many different images which otherwise could not be captured in nature. I took my concepts for both pieces past reality, instead making a slightly fantasy, and slightly surreal composition. This is stronger in the horse painting than it is in the flamingo piece. I am proud to say my flamingos are now being displayed in a Museum in Wisconsin, USA.





EquuStyle: Can you describe your painting process, from the initial idea to the finished piece?


Carla Grace: My painting process begins with an idea. I always see the painting I want to create in my mind before I source imagery to support it. This is why my paintings often require many different images stitched together to make up the whole composition.


Once I have found images, or created images to make up all the different parts of the painting, I will put them together in procreate, on my Ipad. This digital representation of the painting needs to happen in order for me to see the ideas come together fully. Some elements I don’t need to see, but the overall structure needs to be realistic before I start committing it to the painting. Once I am happy with the composition on the iPad, I will begin my sketch on the canvas and let the process go from there. I have begun limiting myself to two passes of paint only. This means that I cram as much detail in each application of paint, but then force myself to walk away after the second one is complete. This means that my paintings are becoming more and more unrefined, and painterly.


I have a tendency to paint to perfection, but don’t want to continue in this way because I want to do what a camera cannot do - and that is create texture and expressive marks with my paint.



EquuStyle: You work with both oil and acrylic, sometimes on the same painting. What effect are you seeking to achieve when using the two mediums together?


Carla Grace: Acrylic is my speed medium, and so I tend to use acrylic for paintings that are required under a deadline, or that are smaller in scale. I will use acrylic for the base tones of the painting which is usually a very quick and basic application of paint to tone and block in sections of the painting. I am then able to begin working with oil paint on top of the acrylic base tones straight away, rather than waiting a full day for the base layers to become touch dry - which is what needs to happen if I used oil paint from the start. Acrylic also tends to be a lot more sharp in finish, where as oil paint has a higher blend ability and therefore I am able to create soft focus details a lot easier than if I did it with acrylic paint. Oil paint is much easier to work with (in my opinion) than acrylic paint for the larger scale paintings, which is why I will favour oil paint for those rather than acrylic.


EquuStyle: How do you approach the use of color in your work?


Carla Grace: I am self taught in all areas, so my colour theory is a little lacking. This makes me feel like I approach my use of colour with a lot of guesswork rather than accurate theory and understanding. Because of this, I have made colour theory my focus to understand and use as an asset to my process. Despite this, my colours always tend to be a little more neutral rather than saturated, leaning closer to what is accurate in nature.


EquuStyle: How do you approach the use of light and shadow in your paintings?


Light and shadow is everything in my work. Contrast and steep representation of value is key to my work. Just in the change between the values I am able to alter the colours to the point where they become vibrant - despite being over all very neutral. Contrast is one of my favourite ways to convey intensity and drama. Even the lack of contrast, when used correctly such as in my white on white painting of a horse, can convey something very powerful. So I approach it with care, and ensure that I get that part of each painting absolutely perfect.


Professional, realistic wildlife artist, Carla Grace, shares her talent and techniques with artists through online tutorials. carlagraceart.com EquuStyle Art & Travel Magazine
Full Horse Portrait in oil paint tutorial

EquuStyle: You offer several hyper-detailed tutorials in oil, acrylic, or both paints on your website. Why are you motivated to share your creative process with artists around the world?


Carla Grace: When I began my career in earnest, I chose wildlife not only because of my connection to the animals I grew up with in Africa, but because I noticed a severe lack of wildlife artists represented in the timeline of art history.


There seems to be a huge gap between the artists who paint wildlife, and artists who paint everything else, and that could be due to many different factors such as vision, conceptual power and overall artist value, but I saw a lot of good artists making good wildlife paintings - not masterful ones. A lot of this is because no one really teaches wildlife artists how to become better. There isn’t very little in the way of intermediate and advanced courses that teach artists how to paint with more skill and run a better practice. So I decided that when I got to the stage in my career that other artists were asking me to teach them, I would do just that. Since I have a lot of content on my platform, I have chosen to create a subscription based access offer, rather than sell tutorial individually - this makes it much more accessible to more artists.


Ultimately, It is my hope that wildlife art as a whole will get better, and start to make an impact in the timeline of art history. Hopefully I can start that process by showing other artists how to level up their game and become masters in their craft.


EquuStyle: What inspired you to create the tutorials “Full Horse Portrait in Oil Paint” and a “Horse Portrait Acrylic Mini Painting”?


Carla Grace: All of my tutorials on my platform are requested by the students who learn through me. Somewhere along the way artists have requested a horse tutorial and so I have created that for them. There is a lot more available in my exclusive content sections for those who are subscribed to my platform on a monthly basis, in addition to the individual tutorials. Horses can also be really hard to paint, especially if you have no idea where to start and how to achieve the simple effects of short hair and the long mane. Seeing how someone else dose it step by step is incredibly helpful.


EquuStyle: How do you balance your artistic creativity with the business side of being an artist?


This is a really challenging aspect of the practice. The business side is a full time job, and the artist side is also a full time job. Being in control of both aspects is almost impossible. It gets to a point where you need to delegate some jobs because otherwise you suddenly realise its been days since you last painted.


I am currently building my dream studio, and the balance between building it all myself, painting and running my business is full on. I am lucky that I love the business side of being an artist, and that I have a husband who now works with me. He helps me with alot of the admin and running of my online tutorial platform.


EquuStyle: Can you discuss a time when creating art helped you through a difficult period in your life?


Carla Grace: There have been times through out my life where being an artist has been the core of what has made things difficult. The insecurity of income and lack of guarantee in sales can cause significant stress. However, even though the industry can be hard to navigate sometimes, I find myself overwhelmingly grateful that I am able to do this full time.


Knowing that I can do what I love every day, and that collectors all over the world love my work get me through every rough patch. Since it is my daily job, I don’t usually make art for the fun of it anymore, so often I have to take a break from the studio when life gets too stressful, such as when my father in law passed away. I didn’t turn to art to work through the grief, even though many artists naturally would do that. This is something that has become a consistent theme, the more art I do for work, the less I do of it for fun. I have become ok with this over the years, and instead will focus on painting with my kids for the fun of it, teaching them and seeing the joy it gives them. I have found this to be more therapeutic and fulfilling during the difficult periods.


A photograph of Carla Grace Award-winning wildlife artist. EquuStyle Art & Travel Magazine equustyle.com carlagrace.com
Carla Grace Award-winning Wildlife Artist

EquuStyle: Given many of the environmental and wildlife crises around the world, what role do you think your art has in society?


Carla Grace: I want people to feel the animal through my work and experience creatures like they wouldn’t otherwise be able to. I want each painting to create a closeness between the viewer and the animal, and to feel like it could draw breath at any moment.


There is a process of immortalisation when something is committed to paint. I feel like it is incredibly respectful to recreate anything with care and true to life details.


As the artist, I am looking at the animals with much more intensity that I ever could in passing. Im taking in every detail and every imperfection that makes them the way they are. It’s more than what can be achieved in a photo. A painting takes a 2 dimensional surface and turns it into something that requires the very best of both the creator and her subject to succeed.


EquuStyle: How do you hope your art will impact viewers on a deeper level?


Carla Grace: I hope that my work inspires awe, that it takes the viewers breath away. From my classic range of wildlife portraiture, I hope that the viewer feels a kinship with the animal. This connection comes from the pure beauty of the animal itself and my technical ability to create it on the canvas.


My signature range is focused on creating a narrative, and I add elements that are intended to provoke a response based on the viewers individual understanding, for example, “Skin to Skin” has been known to provoke both admiration and disgust. Both responses to the painting are a success because it is the reasons behind the response that I am most interested in. If a painting can provoke an emotional response, while still being stunning in its own right then I have succeeded as an artist.








 
 

Updated: Jun 10, 2024

Sandy Sisti advocates for the innate wildness of all animals and their need to be free


A photograph by wild horse photographer and advocate Sandy Sisti of the wild mustang stallion, Mesquite, surveys the grand landscape of McCullough Peaks Herd Management Area outside Cody, Wyoming
"The Black Stallion" The wild mustang stallion, Mesquite, surveys the grand landscape of McCullough Peaks Herd Management Area outside Cody, Wyoming

EquuStyle:  What is it about wild horses that captivates you?


Sandy Sisti: Initially, I was taken in by their beauty. All horses are beautiful, but there’s just something about the wild ones. No matter how many times I see wild horse herds gallop past, their beauty alone never fails to bring me to tears. Once I began spending time with wild horses, I found that it was their toughness and their incredible ability to survive in the toughest of circumstances that really captured my heart.


EquuStyle:  Can you describe what it’s like to spend time wild horses?


Sandy Sisti: There’s nothing quite like spending time with wild horses. I find the experience to be very peaceful. When I’m upset about something, spending time with wild horses always makes me feel better. They really do have a calming influence. Most wild horses in Wyoming live in areas that are difficult to access, so you’re usually alone with the horses and I really enjoy that type of solitude.


A photograph by wild horse photographer and advocate Sandy Sisti of a cute little colt was born in early September 2021 to the mare, Theya, and her band Stallion, Tahlequah. Like all newborns, he barely left his mother’s side, but that will change as he gets older.
"Lean on Me" This cute little colt was born in early September 2021 to the mare, Theya, and her band Stallion, Tahlequah.

EquuStyle:  How did you come up with name of Wild at Heart Images?


Sandy Sisti: I always liked the phrase “wild at heart”, especially after reading Tennessee Williams “A Prayer for the Wild at Heart…” while in college. To me it captures the idea of wanting to do something out of the norm, something that isn’t expected of you. The phrase also reminds me of the innate wildness of all animals and their need to be free. Now that I’m focused on wild horse photography and advocacy, the name really seems to fit.


EquuStyle:  How did growing up on Long Island influence your craft?


Sandy Sisti: Although there wasn’t much wildlife where I grew up, I always had a camera in hand and photographed whatever animals were around. This included our family pets, along with butterflies, birds, small mammals, and the turtles that frequented our local ponds. Once I started driving, Heckscher State Park and Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge were two of my favorite spots for photographing whitetail deer and birds. Although I didn’t go there often, the Bronx Zoo was my favorite place to visit as it exposed me to nature and wildlife that I would never see in my neighborhood.


EquuStyle:  Did you grow up with or around horses?


Sandy Sisti: Unfortunately, I didn’t grow up around horses, but was always crazy about them. I grew up in suburban Long Island, and there weren’t many, if any, horses in the area. My best friend attended horse camp one summer, but my mom wouldn’t allow me to go with her because she was worried that I’d get injured. I did finally start riding, but not until I was an adult.


A photograph by Sandy Sisti wild horse photographer and advocate of when you hear the sound of whinnying and thundering hooves and see a cloud of dust appear on the horizon, you know a herd of horses is galloping past.
"Summer Thunder" When you hear the sound of whinnying and thundering hooves and see a cloud of dust appear on the horizon, you know a herd of horses is galloping past.

EquuStyle:  Did you ever formally study photography? If so, where? 


Sandy Sisti: I never formally studied photography, but always considered photography one of my favorite hobbies, even as a child. When I was attending SUNY Stony Brook as an undergraduate, I was a fine art major (drawing, painting) before switching my major to Biology/Biochemistry. After working in the sciences for many years, I returned to the fine art field as a photographer.


EquuStyle:  How was your professional career impacted after being published in National Geographic and National Geographic Kids magazines?


Sandy Sisti: At the time of these publications, I was mainly focused on wildlife photography in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Being featured by National Geographic helped me to become more well known as a photographer and led to more clients using my work for print publications.


EquuStyle:  What was your experience like when you were honored by The Smithsonian for your image “Surveying the Kingdom”?


Sandy Sisti: It was an incredible honor for my work to be recognized alongside many of the nature and wildlife photographers I looked up to at the time. I visited the Smithsonian a few years prior to receiving this award and made a point to see the Nature’s Best Photography/Windland Smith Rice International Awards exhibit. Even then, I never thought a picture I had taken would ever hang in the Smithsonian. It’s still unbelievable when I think about it.


"Battle at Red Rock" is a photograph by Sandy Sisti wild horse photographer and advocate. The pinto stallion, TNT Dynamite, lunges at band stallion, Kiamichi, as they near the edge of a steep cliff.
"Battle at Red Rock" The pinto stallion, TNT Dynamite, lunges at band stallion, Kiamichi, as they near the edge of a steep cliff.

EquuStyle:  Which creative individuals have most influenced your work?


Sandy Sisti: When I began pursuing photography seriously, I focused mainly on wildlife photography. At that time, world-renowned nature and wildlife photographer, Thomas D. Mangelsen, was my greatest influence. I studied his style and incredible body of work and was really taken with his images of grizzly bears. Grizzly bears became my favorite subject, as well, and I spent more than ten years focused on bears, as well as, the other megafauna living in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.


At the same time, I was also photographing the McCullough Peaks wild horses, who would eventually become the main focus of my photography. The incredibly talented and internationally recognized horse photographer, Carol Walker, was a big influence on my photographic work with wild horses. Over the years, Carol became a cherished friend. These days, I continue to look up to Carol, not only in her work as an amazing artist, but as a powerful and unwavering advocate for wild horses.


"Black Beauty"  is a photograph by Sandy Sisti wild horse photographer and advocate. Frigid temperatures and frozen fog make foraging difficult for the horses in winter. This mare, known as Black Beauty, kept busy hunting for dried grasses under the deep snow.
"Black Beauty" Frigid temperatures and frozen fog make foraging difficult for the horses in winter.

EquuStyle:  Do you have a safe distance that you maintain when photographing wild horses? 


Sandy Sisti: The requirement at McCullough Peaks is to stay at least 300 feet from the wild horse herds, and I do my best to comply with that. I usually don’t get any closer than 100 feet to any other of the more approachable wild horses. Many of the wild horses in Wyoming, run off when they hear a vehicle approach, so I photograph them from my vehicle or from a great distance with a super telephoto lens.


EquuStyle:  Have you ever found yourself in a precarious situation with a wild horse?


Sandy Sisti: In all the years I’ve been photographing wild horses, I’ve never found myself in a precarious situation.


EquuStyle:  Why is advocating for wild horses important to you?


Sandy Sisti: If we don’t continue to advocate for wild horses, in time there will be no more wild horses on our public lands, only livestock. This year, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) plans to remove more than 10,000 wild horses from public land with the majority of these horses moved to long-term holding facilities where they will live out the rest of their lives.


"Thunder and Lightning" is  a photograph by Sandy Sisti wild horse photographer and advocate. Lead mare, Taboo, guides her band to a nearby draw as a fast-moving thunderstorm hits the range.
"Thunder and Lightning" Lead mare, Taboo, guides her band to a nearby draw as a fast-moving thunderstorm hits the range.

Currently there are more than 60,000 once wild horses stockpiled in long-term holding. If the BLM has their way, this eradication of wild horses will continue. I don’t want to live in a world without wild horses and I know I’m not alone. That’s why I continue to advocate for them.


EquuStyle:  Do you believe social media posts are effective for changing the hearts and minds of people about the need to protect wild horses? 


Sandy Sisti: Social media is a very effective tool to help educate people about the plight of our wild horses. The majority of Americans have never seen wild horses and many don’t even know they exist.


Through the use of social media, we can inform people about the BLM’s terrible mismanagement of our wild horses. In time, many of these people will begin to care about the wild horses and some may eventually become advocates. I’ve seen this happen many times thanks to social media.


 "God of Thunder" is a photograph by Sandy Sisti wild horse photographer and advocate. The stallion, Thor, postures towards a rival stallion intent on stealing his mare, Shakira.
"God of Thunder" The stallion, Thor, postures towards a rival stallion intent on stealing his mare, Shakira.

EquuStyle: How has your influence on social media helped with fundraising and motivating people to take action?


Sandy Sisti: I believe that the more people learn about the McCullough Peaks wild horses, the more they care about them.


Sharing stories and photos of these horses on social media gets people involved in their lives and over time they develop a real affection for them. The deep feelings people have for the McCullough Peaks wild horses motivates them to want to help them when they can, with donations, petition writing, etc. Many people who contact me about the McCullough Peaks wild horses have never seen them, but they know everything about them and care about them just as much as I do. Without social media, I don’t think this could happen.


EquuStyle: What would you like people to know about the McCullough Peaks wild Mustangs?


Sandy Sisti: The McCullough Peaks herd is a small population of wild horses that have been effectively managed with PZP immunocontraceptive vaccine since 2011.  Thanks to the use of PZP, their average yearly population growth rate has held at 2% for the last ten years. Because of this, there had been no roundups since a 2013 bait trapping operation where 20 young horses were removed.


"Ice Dancer" is a photograph by Sandy Sisti wild horse photographer and advocate. Graceful as a dancer, the black stallion, Chippewa, makes his way through the fresh snow early on a December morning.
"Ice Dancer" Graceful as a dancer, the black stallion, Chippewa, makes his way through the fresh snow early on a December morning.

During the winter of 2023/2024, the BLM initiated a bait trapping operation at McCullough Peaks and permanently removed 40 horses aged from 4 months to 15 years. During the removal of these horses, nursing foals were taken from their mothers, families were torn apart, bloodlines were expunged and horses were injured. One horse, a yearling filly named “Kat Ballou” died from acute head trauma after running into the side of a holding pen while in the care of the BLM.


Now, more than two months after the conclusion of the bait trapping, the McCullough Peaks horses are still in disarray after the traumatic removal of their longtime family members. Although I’m heartbroken about what happened at McCullough Peaks, this happens every time the BLM rounds up and removes wild horses from their rangeland homes. The BLM destroys the horse’s families and the tight bonds that have been formed over many years of living together. In time, the McCullough Peaks wild horses will adjust as best they can to their new circumstances, but we can’t forget what happened to them as we continue our fight for not only the McCullough Peaks herd, but all the wild horses

.

EquuStyle: Are there particular horses in the McCullough Peaks herd that you have come to know and they recognize you?


Sandy Sisti: I’ve spent thousands of hours with the McCullough Peaks wild horses in the 15 years I’ve been observing and photographing them. I don’t only photograph the horses when I visit, but I talk to them too. Because I’m an almost constant fixture on the range, I believe that many of the horses recognize my voice and scent. It would only seem natural that they would.


A photograph by Sandy Sisti wild horse photographer and advocate of "Stormborne. The stallion, Washakie, rears up to protect his newly acquired family from curious bachelor stallions.
"Stormborne" The stallion, Washakie, rears up to protect his newly acquired family from curious bachelor stallions.

EquuStyle: What do you believe is the best way for people to advocate for wild horses?


Sandy Sisti: One of the best ways to advocate for wild horses is to contact your U.S. Representative and U.S. Senators to inform them about the plight of our wild horses. The only way to truly protect our wild horses is for Congress to enact new legislation to protect wild horses and limit the grazing of private livestock on public lands.








Freedom for Wild Horses with Carol Walker Podcast

Saving the McCullough Peaks Herd: Interview with Sandy Sisti




All images Copyright Sandy Sisti and Wild at Heart Images -all rights reserved. Cannot be reproduced for any purpose without permission from Sandy Sisti and Wild at Heart Images.


 
 

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