Wayne McCrory is a registered professional biologist specializing in the study of wild horses, bears and western toads. He has published more than ninety scientific reports on wildlife and conservation, including two technical reports on wild horses in BC and Alberta and, with horse genetics expert Dr. Gus Cothran, two reports on the genetics of wild horses in the Chilcotin. McCrory lives on a small farm in Hills, BC, with his wife, conservationist and journalist Lorna Visser.
""Readers enthralled by wilderness and horses will revel in McCrory's call for the salvation of the Chilcotin and all its wildlife."" —Booklist, starred review “For thousands of years, humans have used horses for food and for travel, for work and for play. But a few have remained wild. This is an inspiring story about wild horses and their stewardship, told by someone with exceptional experience in the woodlands and grasslands and mountains and rivers of British Columbia, and a rare understanding of the spiritual and material heritage of horses. If anybody can save and celebrate these wild horses, it is Wayne McCrory and the Chilcotin elders. Read this book and you will understand why. And how. You will also have wonderful company on a marvelous adventure.” —J. Edward Chamberlin, author of Horse: How the Horse Has Shaped Civilizations and Storylines: How Words Shape Our World “During a study of grizzly bears to prevent clear-cut logging of the Chilcotin’s Brittany Triangle, biologist Wayne McCrory had an epiphany that shifted his focus to the wild horses living there. After 20 years of pursuing the secrets of wild horse culture and mythology, McCrory concludes that the wild horse is a vibrant part of the predator-prey ecosystem. The Xeni Gwet’in Tsilhqot’in consider the wild horse sacred, and a symbol of freedom. They insist their horse culture existed long before colonization and McCrory uses in-depth biological research to prove this point.” —Sage Birchwater, author of Chilcotin Chronicles and Chiwid “In The Wild Horses of the Chilcotin, Wayne McCrory takes us on a remarkable journey through the 400-year history of the Tŝilhqot’in people’s sacred Qiyus (Cayuse). Championing the right of these horses to exist as a natural component of the ecosystem, McCrory illuminates the archaic and outdated thinking and laws that must change. A compelling read for anyone fascinated by the beauty and majesty of horses and the ‘wild spirit that exists in us all.’” —Donna Kane, author of Summer of the Horse and Orrery