All posts by mjh

Mark Justice Hinton lives in New Mexico and loves the Four Corners region, as well as the Rocky Mountains. Write him at chaco@mjhinton.com.

Public Hearings For The Lobo in Arizona and New Mexico 11/26-12/8

Once known as the most endangered mammal in North America, the Mexican gray wolf is still teetering on the brink of extinction more than 30 years after gaining federal protection under the Endangered Species Act. Even now, with less than 60 lobos left in the wild, wolves are routinely trapped or shot by federal officials for conflicts with cattle on the Gila and Apache National Forests in New Mexico and Arizona.

Almost 10 years after launching what has turned out to be a largely ineffectual wolf reintroduction program in southern New Mexico and Arizona, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) is taking a second look at how it manages lobos. This process could change the Mexican wolf’s current listing status under the Endangered Species Act and current wolf removal policies.

The Mexican Gray Wolf needs us to become personally involved in saving the them by attending one or more of the following meetings if you’re in the area:

* Nov. 26 – Radisson Woodlands Hotel, Flagstaff, AZ.
Nov. 27 – Multipurpose Room, McNary School, McNary, AZ
Nov. 28 – Alpine Community Center, Alpine, AZ.
Nov. 29 – Best Western, Grants, NM.
Nov. 30 – Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, Albuquerque, NM.
* Dec. 1 – Macey Conference Center, Socorro, NM.
Dec. 3 – Tays Special Events Center, Alamogordo, NM.
Dec. 4 – Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum, Las Cruces, NM.
Dec. 5 – Glenwood Community Center, Glenwood, NM.
Dec. 6 – Eastern Arizona College, Thatcher, AZ.
Dec. 7 – University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ.
Dec. 8 – Glendale Civic Center, Glendale, AZ

For more information about the Mexican Gray Wolf Recovery program and to learn more about the upcoming hearings, please contact Nathan Newcomer (nathan@nmwild.org) or Stephen Capra (steve@nmwild.org).

Public Meeting On Chaco Canyon Road 11/15/07 in Albuquerque, NM

Your Input Needed!

The New Mexico Department of Transportation and Federal Highway Administration, in cooperation with San Juan County, has initiated a study to evaluate alternatives for improving the unpaved portion of San Juan County Road 7950, the roadway providing primary vehicular access to Chaco Culture National Historical Park.

DATE: Thursday, November 15

WHERE: NMDOT District 3 Office
7500 Pan American Freeway, NE
Albuquerque, NM 87109

TIME: 6:00 pm: Open House
6:30 pm: Staff Presentation
7:00 pm: Public Comments

If you are interested in the project, but are unable to attend the meeting, please contact John Taschek, at TEC, (505) 821-4700. Comments will be accepted at the meeting or can be mailed to John Taschek at 8901 Adams, N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87113, or e-mailed to taschek@aol.com. Requests for Americans with Disabilities Act-related accommodations should also be directed to John Taschek.

For Talking Points Contact Nathan Newcomer (nathan@nmwild.org)

http://www.protect-chacocanyon-blog.com/
http://www.dont-pave-chaco.com/


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Living With Wolves – 11/7, 7pm, Santa Fe, NM

Presented by The New Mexico Wilderness Alliance (nmwild.org)

Jim and Jamie Dutcher, wildlife documentary filmmakers, will present a one-hour program on their six-year study of wolves in Idaho (including a 37-minute segment of their film: “Living with Wolves”) at The Lensic Theater on November 9th at 7:00 pm. Tickets are just $5!

This event aims to raise the awareness of Mexican Wolf Recovery in New Mexico. Currently, there are only about 25 wild Mexican Wolves in the wild in New Mexico.

Phone: 505-988-1234
Email: boxoffice@lensic.com
Website: http://www.ticketssantafe.org

Brought here for a program sponsored by the New Mexico Wilderness Alliance, the Dutcher’s have graciously waived a considerable part of their speaking fee to offer their program at the Lensic in support of the Lobo.

“As we see wolves, once again, being shot and trapped and poisoned, we recognize that our incredible opportunity to live with wolves is unlikely to ever happen again,” the Dutcher’s explain. “For that reason, we feel that we have an obligation to share the lives of The Sawtooth Pack and their kin with the widest audience possible, to save wolves and the wild land they need for future generations.”

The knowledge and passion brought by the Dutcher’s will help raise awareness of the plight of our Mexican Gray Wolves in Southern New Mexico, and inspire people to support the New Mexico Wilderness Alliance’s conservation efforts throughout the state.

Upcoming Hikes & Projects at nmwild.org

November 10, 2007
Geology hike into Rio Grande Gorge at Big Arsenic Springs within proposed Ute Mountain National Conservation Area.
Leader: Elsbeth Atencio, trained educator, geologist, hydrologist.
Maximum Participants: 12
Cost: $5.00
Distance: 3 miles round trip

Hike into the Rio Grande gorge to learn about the natural and geologic history of the gorge. Frequent stops to discuss features and visit to ancient petroglyphs. Pass through numerous ecotones to a lush riparian zone interspersed with huge, river-side ponderosas. Spectacular views of the river. Trail could be slightly icy at the rim dependant on the weather. Bring lunch, snacks and plenty of water.

Contact: Jim O’Donnell (751-7309) or Roberta Salazar (776-5200)

November 10
Piedra Lisa Trail Service Project

Last New Mexico Wilderness Alliance project for 2007! Join us for a day of general trail maintenance on the Piedra Lisa trail on the north side of the Sandia Mountain Wilderness near Placitas. We will be doing tread work and erosion control along the trail. Piedra Lisa is Spanish for smooth or slippery rock, and the northern section of the trail has plenty of loose rock on slightly steep sections that give credibility to the name.

Afterwards, we will join other groups working on projects and environmental issues at Anasazi Fields Winery. This gathering will be a chance for folks to meet and learn what others are doing to protect the Sandia Mountains.

Maximum participants: 30

Contact: Bill Velasquez at 505-881-0555, bvelasquez@gardnerzemke.com for more info on the Service Project. For more info on the gathering at Anasazi Fields Winery, contact Michael Scialdone, scial@nmwild.org, 505-843-8696.

Besh-Ba-Gowah Archaeological Park, Globe, AZ

In the presence of the past at Besh-Ba-Gowah, by John Stanley, The Arizona Republic

A thriving community

In its heyday, from about 1225 to 1400, the village of Besh-Ba-Gowah was home to 350 people – hunters, gatherers and remarkably sophisticated farmers who grew corn, squash, beans and cotton and other crops, irrigating when possible and dry farming when not. They understood flood-plain farming techniques.

Archaeological evidence suggests the site was occupied from about A.D. 750, perhaps even earlier, as the thriving Hohokam culture established villages across the region. Over time, the residents of Besh-Ba-Gowah were influenced by the Ancestral Puebloans to the north and developed their own distinctive culture. (Ancestral Puebloans were formerly known as the Anasazi, a term now considered inexact and – to the modern descendants of the Puebloan tribes – offensive.)

Generation upon generation of Salado people lived here, more or less in peace with their neighbors, tending their crops and making ever more sophisticated pottery, including the intricate geometric designs of Gila polychrome.

Besh-Ba-Gowah was part of a loose-knit trade network that reached from tropical Mexico to the Pacific Coast and the Gulf of Mexico.

All that changed in the 14th century, when widespread drought brought increasing competition for food and water, spurring widespread social upheaval, war and large-scale migrations.

By 1400, Besh-Ba-Gowah was effectively a ghost town. …

Besh-Ba-Gowah Archaeological Park
Where: 1324 Jesse Hayes Road, Globe, AZ

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/1025beshbagowah1026.html

Silver City left off wolf public scoping itinerary

Silver City Sun-News – Silver City left off wolf public scoping itinerary By M. John Fayhee Sun-News reporter [via http://www.abqjournal.com/abqnews/]

SILVER CITY — The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, the federal agency that oversees all endangered species issues, including the controversial Mexican gray wolf reintroduction in the Gila National Forest, will host a series of 12 public scoping meetings beginning next month that may very well determine the overall direction of the wolf reintroduction.

Those meetings will be held in numerous places, including Flagstaff, Phoenix, Tucson, Las Cruces, Grants, Alamogordo and Albuquerque, that are hundreds of miles away from the closest free-roaming wolf.

And they will be held in hamlets, such as Glenwood, N.M., and Alpine and Hon-Dah, Ariz., that, while close to the wolf-recovery area, are very small and remote.

But the only large town that can legitimately be described as part of the wolf recovery area — Silver City — which has neighborhoods with more people than Alpine and Glenwood combined and which has beaucoup residents that pass wolf signs every time they go for a backcountry hike — will not host one of the public-scoping meetings.

A spokesperson for USFWS said accusations that Silver City was left off the public-scoping itinerary had nothing to do with the town’s perceived liberal, pro-wolf-recovery bias. …

“We have been criticized for holding our regular wolf-related meetings in Albuquerque, and we have been told Albuquerque draws people who tend to be receptive to reintroductions,” Slown continued. “Conversely we’ve been criticized for holding meetings in southwest New Mexico because access is difficult and we draw people who do not favor endangered species reintroductions. How we have dealt with that is to balance our regular wolf-management meetings in the affected area with ones in the larger cities.”

“A lot of us are wondering why Silver City was not included,” said Kevin Bixby, executive director of the Las Cruces-based Southwest Environmental Center.

“They probably did a calculation, and they wanted to balance the towns where they perceived they would get a pro-wolf crowd with towns they figured would get an anti-wolf crowd. They’re probably just trying to be even-handed. The preliminary list did not even include Albuquerque. We had to petition Fish and Wildlife to include Albuquerque.”

Ironically, Ty Bays, a long-time local rancher who serves as the Southwest Regional Vice-President for the New Mexico Cattlegrowers’ Association, feels that Silver City may have been left off the public-scoping meeting itinerary because of its anti-wolf perception among USFWS personnel.

“I think they left Silver City off because the Grant County Commissioners sent a resolution to Fish and Wildlife saying that the federal government needs to pay ranchers for livestock losses due to wolves,” Bays said. “I think the decision is political, but it doesn’t really matter. We’ll make the drive to Glenwood for the meeting there.” …

According to Slown, the 12 scoping meetings are equally divided between Arizona and New Mexico.

“First, locations were selected that occur within the current wolf recovery area,” she said. “This gives us Glenwood in New Mexico. Reserve was a possibility, but it is in proximity to Alpine, which will be having a meeting on Nov. 28, so we put the meeting in Glenwood for Dec. 5. With Glenwood covered, Las Cruces was our choice as the southern location outside the reintroduction area.”

But there is more than just providing members of the public from a far-ranging geographic area the opportunity to comment on the wolf reintroduction. Slown indicated that part of the dialogue may very be expanding the wolf reintroduction into other areas.

“One of the questions we want to ask is, “should we be putting wolves in other areas of their historic range?‘ so that we do not have all our eggs in one basket, so to speak,” Slown said. “That is why you see locations not generally associated with the wolf reintroduction program.”

Bays feels that decision has already been made.

Take Action: Help Protect Chaco Culture National Historical Park

The Wilderness Alliance (nmwild.org) is encouraging people to contact Taschek Environmental Consulting regarding a study they are performing on paving the road to Chaco. Follow both of these links, if you are interested.

http://ga1.org/campaign/chaco
http://www.taschek.net/contactus.asp

STOP THE CHACO ROAD (has email addresses)
http://www.dont-pave-chaco.com/

The Hopis call Chaco “Yupqoyvi” (“the place beyond the horizon”)

ABQjournal NM: Chaco Canyon Meeting Set Despite Concerns, By Leslie Linthicum, Journal Staff Writer

The Hopis call Chaco “Yupqoyvi” (“the place beyond the horizon”) and, along with other pueblos, trace some of their early history to the ancient towns that now attract historians, archaeologists and tourists to the park.

http://www.abqjournal.com/news/state/602139nm10-13-07.htm

Chaco Culture Historical Park is a national park that encompasses ruins of pueblo towns that date to the 9th century. It has been named a World Heritage Site and, despite its remote location— at the end of more than a dozen miles of rough dirt road in northwestern New Mexico— it attracts about 80,000 visitors each year.

Citing safety concerns, the county government decided to improve the entrance access. It paved with a chip-seal coat the stretch of County Road 7900 that leads off U.S. 550 to County Road 7950 and plans to pave 7950, which leads to the park’s entrance.

Opponents of a paved road say that it will inundate Chaco with more cars, recreational vehicles and high-volume tour buses, and that the park’s archaeological treasures will suffer under large crowds. …

[State and federal transportation officials and San Juan County have scheduled a public hearing next week about proposed improvements to the road that leads to Chaco Canyon.] The meeting is scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. Thursday [10/18/07], with public comments to be taken at 7 p.m. It is in the San Juan County Commission chambers at 100 S. Oliver Dr. in Aztec.

Chaco Collection to Open at UNM

[from UNM Today]

The collaboration between UNM and NPS dates back to the founding of the Chaco Culture National Historical Park in 1907. Edgar Lee Hewett, founder of UNM’s anthropology department, the Museum of New Mexico and the School of American Research, was instrumental in passing the Antiquities Act of 1906, which led to the creation of Chaco Canyon National Monument the following year.

UNM had partial ownership in the monument; acquired sections from the SAR,
and all state sections were deeded back to the federal government in 1949. Hewett conducted research in Chaco Canyon at Chetro Ketl in the 1920s and early 30s. The UNM/SAR Archaeology Field School built research facilities in Chaco Canyon and excavated several small sites from 1935-’47. As a result, UNM holds extensive and important collections from Chaco Canyon. The collections complement the NPS collections and provide researchers an opportunity to study the full range of Chaco material culture.

UNM and NPS signed a memorandum of understanding in 1949 when UNM deeded its parkland to the National Park Service. As a result, the NPS granted UNM “perpetual preferential rights” to conduct scientific research in Chaco Canyon.

The MOU was renegotiated to establish the joint NPS-UNM Chaco Project, which was designed to determine through survey, excavation and multi-disciplinary research, the relationship between the environment and the prehistoric inhabitants of Chaco Canyon. The Chaco Project was based in the UNM Department of Anthropology and funded by the NPS from 1970-85.

http://www.unm.edu/~market/cgi-bin/archives/002296.html

UNM Wolf Awareness Week (Oct 15th – 19th)

UNM Wilderness Alliance

October 17th– Wolf Awareness Day, East side of SUB, 9AM – 3PM. Join UNM Wilderness Alliance, New Mexico Wilderness Alliance, Defenders of Wildlife, and others out showing support for UNM’s mascot, the Mexican gray wolf. Featuring guest speakers, live music, and a special appearance by the Great Old Broads for Wilderness.

October 17th– Special showing of the documentary “Wolves” at 7:30PM at the Curio Artspace – 1451 12th NW in the warehouse district, north of Mountain between Bellamah and Aspen. Featuring live music after film.

October 18th– Special wolf presentation by Michael Robinson, conservation advocate with Center for Biological Diversity and author of “Predatory Bureaucracy”. 6PM in the SUB.

http://www.unm.edu/~unmwild/

Chaco Photos

A visitor pointed out a problem with some photos missing from a few of my Chaco pages (www.mjhinton.com/chaco). It will take a while to sort that out, but in the meantime, I have photos in other locations:

mjh’s Chaco photos | 75 of 75
http://mjhinton.com/chaco/photos/fb.php/

Flickr: mjhinton’s photos tagged with chacocanyon
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mjhinton/tags/chacocanyon/

Virtual Lobos: Forgetting Where Your Mascot Comes From

Student group says University should help Mexican gray wolf – News

by Bryan Gibel, Daily Lobo

The Mexican gray wolf is UNM’s namesake, but a student group said the University isn’t doing enough to protect its mascot.

The UNM Wilderness Alliance issued a resolution in September demanding the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service improve its Mexican gray wolf reintroduction program.

The resolution also urged University administration to issue “institutional policies and official resolutions” in support of Mexican gray wolves.

“UNM could be a major block of support for the Mexican gray wolf,” UNM Wilderness Alliance President Phil Carter said. “The University is way overdue in defending their mascot. This is their chance to do that.” …

The reintroduction program shouldn’t exist because it threatens the livelihood of ranchers in New Mexico, said Brian Phillips, a spokesman for Rep. Steve Pearce.

Pearce’s district covers most of the area where wolves are being reintroduced in southern and central New Mexico.

“They’ve killed and eaten horses down to the bone, and we’ve seen tracks running right up to people’s doors,” Phillips said. “There’s a girl who’s 11 or 12 years old that has to wear a gun on the ranch to protect herself from wolves.”

Pearce introduced a bill in the U.S. Congress last legislative session to end the wolf reintroduction program, but the bill did not pass.

Phillips said Pearce won’t let that failure stop him from trying to end the wolf reintroduction program. [mjh: Imagine Pearce as our Senator.]

Carter said part of the problem is the federal government leases Forrest Service land to ranchers where the wolves are being reintroduced.

“This is intended as public land and thus is subject to the endangered species act,” he said. “The federal government is the landlord to these cattle ranchers, and they should revise land-use policies to minimize conflict between wolves and the livestock industry.”

Carter said wolves do not present a significant threat to ranchers in New Mexico. He said UNM and the Fish and Wildlife Service need to protect the species from extinction.

“UNM picked up this mascot in 1920 and just kind of slept while their mascot was eliminated form the country during the 20th century,” he said. “It would be a tragedy to let these animals be exterminated again, which is what is happening now.”

October in Conservation History (nmwild.org)

From nmwild.org:

This Month in
Conservation History
October 2, 1922 – Aldo Leopold proposes 1 million acre Gila Wilderness.
October 25, 1923 – Carlsbad Caverns National Monument is officially
designated.
October 31, 1982 – Yates Petroleum Company illegally bulldozes a road into the Salt Creek Wilderness, near Roswell, New Mexico.

Conservation Quote of the Week
“For if one link in nature’s chain might be lost, another might be lost, until the
whole of things will vanish by piecemeal.”
– Thomas Jefferson