The "Collector"
Home | Up | The "Collector" | Over & Under Feeding

This website is owned and created by Nancy Kerson, a private citizen. Information about BLM adoptions is offered as a service, to help mustangs find homes.

Please direct adoption questions to the BLM, not to me.

And we sure as heck are not a Mustang car dealership!

This website:
Copyright 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
All Rights Reserved.
I am happy to share, but please give me a credit when you "borrow" things off my website! Thanks! Just say, "author, Nancy Kerson www.mustangs4us.com "

VIDEOS OF INTEREST TO MUSTANG & BURRO ADOPTERS:


Kitty Lauman:
From Wild to Willing:
Using the Bamboo Pole to Gentle Mustangs
More from Lauman Training available now!

DVD or VHS
(2-DVD or 2-VHS set) almost 3 hours of instruction!

$49.95 plus $5 shipping/handling = $54.95 total

Format:

 DVD:

VHS:

Can't Order Online?
No Problem!
Just Call TOLL FREE
1-877-345-6748
(1-877-FILMS4U)

Can't do Paypal?

Try Google Checkout:

Can't Order Online?
No Problem!
Just Call TOLL FREE
1-877-345-6748
(1-877-FILMS4U)


Lesley Neuman:
The First Touch
Gentling Your Mustang
$45.00

Lesley works with 3 wild horses at a BLM adoption, and very clearly explains what is happening, what she is doing, & what she sees in each horse as it progresses. Study this video and you can learn "pressure and release" gentling techniques to gentle your own new mustang!

Format:


Help for Burro adopters!
Crystal Ward
Donkey Training

All the basics of gentling, handling, and training. A MUST for new burro adopters! Good for domestic donkeys, too!

FORMAT

Can't do Paypal?
No Problem!
Just Call TOLL FREE
1-877-345-6748
(1-877-FILMS4U)

____________________


Can't do Paypal?
No Problem!
Just Call TOLL FREE
1-877-345-6748
(1-877-FILMS4U)


If you don't want to buy online, Call TOLL FREE
1-877-345-6748 

(1-877-FILMS4U)

Home
Up
Adopt A Mustang Wild Horse
Burros!
Mustang Mules
Wild Horse & Burro Herd Areas
Mustang Wild Horse History
Mustang - Link to History
How to Gentle A Wild Horse
What's Next After Gentling?
Our "Wild" Horse Herd
Mustang * Horse Colors
Videos from Video Mike
Mustang Links
The Future?
Mustang & Burro Events

Lewis & Clark

Mustang History, part 2

Don't be a Collector!

We want to encourage adoption, but only RESPONSIBLE adoption. It helps no one, including the horse, to take on more horses than you can properly care for. The following is an article that explains the Collector syndrome:

The Animal Collector Phenomenon
http://www.coloradoan.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080109/UPDATES01/80109043

by Terry Jester

We’ve seen it time and time again. The elderly lady with 50 cats in her home. The couple with three dozen small dogs kept in cages throughout the house. Horses packed in a corral with inadequate food, water, or shelter. Too many dogs, too many cats, or too many horses.

What these scenarios may all have in common is something called “the collector phenomenon”. This is when people collect living creatures without regard to their proper care. It’s as if the people collecting the animals cannot see the horrible conditions in which the animals are kept. Not, “refuse to see”, but actually, “cannot” see. Like the anorexic who looks in the mirror during his or her illness and sees not protruding bone, but fat where none exits, the animal collector looks upon their horde and sees happy, healthy animals regardless of the reality of the situation. It is an illness, recognized by the American Psychiatric Association as being related to Addiction and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. It is a true psychiatric condition that is often misunderstood.

Animal collectors don’t understand why the authorities are notified and why people are upset. Many collectors really cannot see that the animals in their care are undernourished, sick, or receiving inadequate shelter from the elements. From their point of view, they are caring properly for the animals. They are truly distressed when the animals are removed because they may feel that no one can take care of the animals as well as they have been caring for them. Even when the animals in their care are dead, diseased, emaciated, and living in filth, the collectors will insist that the animals are loved and well-cared for.

“This is a true pathology,” states Randall Lockwood, PhD., from The Humane Society of the United States. “Very few collector cases simply involve good intentions gone awry. This is evident to anyone witnessing the level of filth and decay in which these animals are kept and their often advanced state of malnutrition, parasite infection, and disease..”

“Many collectors have enablers helping them and making excuses for the conditions in which the animals are kept”, states Humane Officer Cindy Machado, an expert in Animal Collectors from the Marin Humane Society in Novato, California. “In the cases involving so called “rescues”, where animals are collected in what are self- described “animal sanctuaries”, many supporters will state “if only the rescue had more money”, or, “These people are truly doing the best that they can under the circumstances”.

But it doesn’t matter what the circumstances are or what the intentions may be. It doesn’t matter if the animal number is 1, 100, or 1000. If the animal is not receiving proper care, the situation should be recognized and the animals relinquished to those that can care for them. Anything else is criminal and should be looked upon as such.

The collectors may indeed be sick, but it doesn’t change the level of suffering that the animal endures.”


Treatment, or Prosecution?

Fort Collins psychologist Dr. Barry Lindstrom states, “If this is truly a case of mental illness, then the person responsible needs help. It is all well and good that the animals are being cared for when an intervention takes place, but we have to remember that the individual responsible needs help too. They are doing this for a reason – loss, trauma, mental illness. They need help as well. Psychotherapy and/or medication. They need something, and if their needs are not addressed then they will go back to the hoarding pattern as soon as is possible.”

Officer Machado: “It’s a delicate balance. Prosecution takes a tremendous toll on all involved. It’s costly, with animals needing to be cared for, housed and fed while the case goes through the system. This can take months, sometimes years. But it is necessary in order to have a say in what the collector is able to do in the future.”

Unfortunately, the recidivism (relapse) rate of animal collectors is quite high. Insuring that the collector won’t go out and simply acquire more animals when current animals are removed usually requires a cooperative effort between animal welfare agencies and the court or law enforcement system. Requirements for probation should include full access by humane officers or law enforcement to inspect premises at any time with the understanding that any unauthorized animals found, regardless of conditions, will be seized. Other requirements should include the sterilization of any remaining animals and the reimbursement to responding agencies any veterinary costs and board fees for seized animals.

What it comes down to is that the collector, although professing to caring for the animals and taking care of their needs is in reality only fulfilling their own needs -- appeasing their addiction, their desire to control, and their obsession with keeping animals. These people live in a very altered state of reality. It is unfortunate that the animals in their care must live in it with them.

link to image:
http://forums.prospero.com/n/docs/docDownload.aspx?guid=040E132F-2705-481F-BAAD-E9EF4304A851&webtag=AlexBrown 

OUR HERD:
Ruby (mustang)   Sparky (mustang)   Benny (mustang - formerly Kingsley)   Silver (Belgian X QH)    Bert & Dawn (Burros)  Max (Mammoth Jack)  Eleanor (Mustang Mule)  Lewis & Clark (Older Sale Mustangs)

ADOPT A MUSTANG OR BURRO!
WHERE TO ADOPT l HMA GALLERY | CHOOSE THE RIGHT ONE | STORIES I ORPHAN FOALS

BURNS RIDER SALE LAW I
 CARSON CITY-WARM SPRINGS CORRECTIONAL FACILITY WILD HORSE ADOPTIONS

MAIN SECTIONS OF THIS WEBSITE:
Adopt A Mustang Wild Horse | Burros! | Mustang Mules | Wild Horse & Burro Herd Areas | Mustang Wild Horse History | Mustang - Link to History | How to Gentle A Wild Horse | What's Next After Gentling? | Our "Wild" Horse Herd | Mustang * Horse Colors | Videos from Video Mike | Mustang Links | The Future? | Mustang & Burro Events

HORSE COLORSGENTLING & TRAINING  MUSTANG HISTORY GALLERY OF HERD AREASVIDEOS

copyright 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Nancy Kerson, all rights reserved - I'm happy to share, just need to be asked and credit given where due.

Disclaimer: Horses are inherently dangerous. Use the information contained within this website at your own risk.

LINKS TO FRIENDS AND RESOURCES:

  
 
 

CALIFORNIA BLM ADOPTERS ASSISTANCE

 
IWHBA                                    BCHA                                     CADAMA