High hay costs push up cases of animal abandonment
in Ore.
By The Associated Press
BEND, Ore.
- High prices and scarce supply for hay this season are leading
to abandoned horses, according to animal-welfare groups.
"This is the first year where
people are literally just opening the gate and kicking them (the
horses) out," said Chuck Fisher, ranch manager at Equine
Outreach in Bend, which rescues and rehabilitates horses and puts
them up for adoption.
Just last week, he said, he'd gotten a call about
taking in three tame horses found starving in Ochoco National
Forest.
A year ago, he bought hay for $125 per ton. This
year, he is paying $200, Fisher told The Bulletin newspaper in
Bend.
"Hay, if you can find it, is very high right
now," said Rodger Huffman, program manager of livestock identification
at the Oregon Department of Agriculture. "That situation
is statewide."
Tony Aceti, owner of Hay Depot in Bend, said he
is selling his premium hay for $200 per ton, and oats-and-alfalfa
hay for $140.
"There's people that just can't afford it,"
he said. "It's sad."
Huffman said that cattle are being auctioned off
in record numbers this year as a result of hay costs. Hay shortages
last winter prompted many ranchers to hoard as much as they could
buy and store this summer, which resulted in the large price jump,
he said.
Fisher said that between the high cost of feed,
fuel and fertilizer, horse owners feel they are just "out
of options."
Aceti said that until recently, it was easy to
find local farmers who grew hay and sold it cheaply from their
property. But then developers bought up the farmland and built
subdivisions, reducing the local hay supply considerably.
He said he can usually count on having sold 20
percent of his inventory by the start of December. But this year,
he said, 80 percent of what he bought over the summer is already
gone.
Lynn Ouchida, community outreach director for
the Humane Society of Central Oregon, said where the farms and
ranches once were, ranchettes have sprung up to take their place,
many of them bought by people who always dreamed of owning a horse.
Some of them "just don't know what they're
getting in to," Ouchida said. "You can buy an inexpensive
horse around here, but it's the maintenance that really costs."
Fisher said that hay and supplements can run a
horse owner at least $60 per month, depending on how large and
how active the animal is.
Abandonment of a horse is a misdemeanor, with
a maximum fine of $2,500, according to the Deschutes County sheriff's
office.
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