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Cable, Harness and Backplane Testing Made Easy! | ||
View from Dead Horse Point 2000 feet above the Colorado River |
![]() Richard took this photo while visiting Dead Horse Point with his wife and daughter. Richard enjoys photography as a hobby.
Well the story goes, before the turn of the century, mustang herds ran wild on the mesas near Dead Horse Point. This unique promontory provided a natural corral into which the horses were driven by cowboys. The only escape was through a narrow, 30-yard neck of land controlled by fencing. Mustangs were then roped and broken, with the better ones being kept for personal use or sold to eastern markets. Unwanted culls of "broomtails" were left behind to find their way off the Point.
According to one legend, a band of broomtails was left corralled on the Point. The gate was supposedly left open so the horses could return to the open range. For some unknown reason, the mustangs remained on the Point. There they died of thirst within sight of the Colorado River, 2,000 feet below. |
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