Some 170 Kaimanawa wild horses were successfully re-homed following a muster from the Waiouru Military Training Area earlier this month.
A total of 175 were mustered, however five horses were deemed unsuitable for adoption by the veterinarian and had to be euthanised.
Two dedicated not-for-profit groups had the mammoth task of finding homes for the horses. Kaimanawa Wild Horse Preservation Society (KWHPS) placed 13 horses and Kaimanawa Heritage Horses (KHH) re-homed 157.
A month out from the muster only around 60 horses had homes, but the application total came in at over 270, with KHH receiving a massive influx of applications in March after the annual population survey showed 621, meaning there were 321 horses too many within the range.
The re-homing total applications is a record number in the history of wild horse re-homing.