Water guzzlers may provide critical relief for wildlife during drought
Jun 19, 2026
Dug into the ground, with views as far away as the Continental Divide, rests a fiberglass tub that just may save lives. Not necessarily humans, but everything else, from buzzing bees to flitting songbirds to herds of Rocky Mountain elk.
In a good year, this tub would fill with about 500 gallons
of rain and snowmelt, offering the landscape’s creatures relief during dry, summer months. But this wasn’t a normal year, and this particular tank needed some help. So a group of 10 or so volunteers led by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department gathered on a Friday in mid-June for some old-fashioned repair work. At the end, they filled it with water, and the Woods Landing Volunteer Fire Department will check back later this summer to fill it up again.
The guzzler — a fiberglass reservoir that in good years would fill with as much as 500 gallons of rain and snowmelt — was installed in the 1990s and in need of a tune-up. (Christine Peterson)
The guzzler, as the water reservoir is called, is one of a few hundred scattered around the state offering water for wildlife during hot summer months. And while some in the wildlife management community question their utility, Jerry Cowles, a Wyoming Game and Fish Department habitat biologist, said wildlife will need every bit of help they can get as they head into a hot, dry summer after the hottest, driest winter in recorded history.
“These are critical,” Cowles said. “If they don’t have water up here, animals have to go the next nearest spot, which are springs a couple miles that way and more than a mile down to the Laramie River. Guzzlers connect wildlife to the landscape, making it so they don’t have to move as far when it’s hot.”
Water for wildlife
Harsh winters can kill many big game species like pronghorn and deer. They struggle to locate food through thick, crusted snow or to find a place to rest their weary bodies.
But drought can also prove fatal to Wyoming’s ungulates. Like all of us, they need water to survive. So federal agencies like the Bureau of Land Management and U.S. Forest Service, state agencies like Game and Fish, and plenty of nonprofit groups like the Lander-based Water for Wildlife, Backcountry Hunters and Anglers and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation build these strategically placed puddles in particularly dry regions.
“Even in winter, free water is a big deal,” said Rich Guenzel, a retired Game and Fish biologist who volunteered to help with the guzzler repairs. “Some places, they have springs or creeks. This is on a southern exposure and gets a lot of wind, so [it] would be a little drier but because there’s less snow, so critters want to be here.”
Jerry Cowles, a Wyoming Game and Fish Department habitat biologist, fills the freshly-cleaned guzzler with water hauled in for the job. (Christine Peterson)
While elk or mule deer could wander down a couple of miles from this section to drink from the Laramie River, many are reluctant. They want to avoid traffic and insects like disease-bearing mosquitoes associated with river corridors. Guzzlers are particularly popular in the southwest portion of the state, like the Red Desert, where water is even more precious, Cowley said.
Animals can smell water from miles away, and trail cameras positioned at guzzlers prove their utility. Pictures from some Wyoming guzzlers show everything from moose to mountain lions to blue grouse coming in for a drink.
Manmade relief
Volunteers moved and propped up posts while a Game and Fish technician pounded them into the ground on that day in mid-June. This particular guzzler was built in the ‘90s by the Bureau of Land Management and Game and Fish as a way to provide relief for the region’s pronghorn, mule deer and other wildlife, Cowles said.
But after decades of use, the posts holding up barbed wire intended to keep the cows away from the guzzler had begun rotting. Much of the barbed wire had fallen down, and the guzzler was filling with dirt, muck and silt.
New posts to keep cattle at bay are driven into the ground surrounding the guzzler. (Christine Peterson)
While building the new fence, volunteers created a bigger perimeter around the guzzler with continuous metal fencing firmly attached to the posts. Volunteers made sure the fence sat at least 18 inches off the ground, high enough for pronghorn and other smaller-bodied creatures to shimmy underneath but low enough that cows and horses could not get through. Elk and adult mule deer could jump over.
The rest of the volunteers scraped muck from the bottom of the tank and built a rain-and-snowmelt funnel using old barn roofing to collect and send water into PVC pipes to then dump into the guzzler. The tank also has a partial roof to limit evaporation and a set of stairs on the other side so wildlife can walk down and reach water as levels decrease.
By the beginning of last summer, the tank was full; this year, it was empty.
Jerry Cowles grinds PVC pipe that feeds rainwater into the guzzler, channeled down along old barn roofing panels. (Christine Peterson)
The drought is “a bad situation that’s hard on people and animals,” said Guy Litt, a volunteer and board member of the Wyoming chapter of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers. “It’s clear this one needs work, and this is the time to be doing it.”
How much, exactly, guzzlers help targeted wildlife species is still up for debate. Litt had a ewe bighorn sheep tag in a nearby area, and while he saw several guzzlers built for sheep, he only saw elk and pronghorn using them. Daryl Lutz, a Game and Fish wildlife biologist in the Lander region, worries guzzlers can artificially concentrate wildlife in certain areas on a landscape. The West’s wildlife evolved to survive extreme weather like drought, he added. But if research shows populations are becoming limited by water, then perhaps they could help.
As Cowles opened the spigot and began dumping hundreds of gallons of water into the tank, it was easy to see how wildlife, including the songbirds sitting on the newly built fence, could flock to this spot in the parched summer months.
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