South of Hot Springs, some 600 mustangs run free in the 11,000 acre Black Hills Wild Horse Sanctuary. It was established in 1988 by rancher, author and conservationist Dayton O. Hyde as a home for wild mustangs that were being rounded up and sometimes sold for slaughter.
Hyde, now 90 years old, was the subject of the 2013 documentary, Running Wild. The film tells the story of his life as a cowboy that began when he ran away from Michigan at the age of 13 and rode the rails to his uncle’s Oregon cattle ranch.
Helping Hyde at the Black Hills Wild Horse Sanctuary is Susan Watt, who serves as executive director. She’s an Alabama native who first came to the sanctuary as a volunteer twenty years ago. Hyde has said that the sanctuary couldn’t survive without her.
During a Dakota Midday broadcast from the Mammoth Site in Hot Springs, Dayton Hyde and Susan Watt discussed their love of wild horses and work at wild horse sanctuary.