Category Archives: newmexico

Hear! Hear! Stop the Water Hijackers

ABQJOURNAL OPINION/LETTERS: Talk of the Town

Hydro Thievery Is Just Morally Repugnant
        REGARDING THE Augustin water grabbers breaking their silence, what they have actually done is create a document of puffery and propaganda of which a peacock would be proud but no person of reason could take seriously.
        The plan to pump oceans of water from underneath the Plains of San Augustin would set a terrible precedent in which water would be sequestered and privatized for individual profit without regard to the wreckage of abandoned communities and environmental devastation left behind.
        Contrary to the corporate claim, it is not known how much water could be pumped from the Augustin basin without impairing the wells of people who live there and without affecting stream flows in the Gila and Alamosa rivers, both of which form rich wildlife corridors on which people depend.
        It is a ridiculous irony that the plan to pipe this water to the Rio Grande and make some as-yet-unsuspecting end users pay for it through the nose would likely undermine the stream flow from the Alamosa River that is already entering the Rio Grande basin for free right now.
MARY KATHERINE RAY
Winston

ABQJOURNAL OPINION/LETTERS: Talk of the Town

Wolfstock 6/11/11

Wild Spirit Wolf Sanctuary – Wolfstock

Wolfstock

Far-out! Wild Spirit Wolf Sanctuary is hosting a groovy musical festival on June 11th, and we encourage all music-lovers to attend. This all-day music extravaganza will feature local bands from Albuquerque and Santa Fe, playing a wide variety of music from Americana to global sounds.

We encourage people to camp out on Friday night, watch the festivities on Saturday, and possibly stay another night before heading back out onto the road.

Tickets are $25 if purchased before June 1st, otherwise ticket prices will be $30. You can buy them online [follow this link] or at the door. Ticket price includes free camping on Friday and Saturday night.

Can you dig it?

The Bands

Boris McCutcheon
Visit website

Boyfriend

Goddess of Arno Balkan Dance Band
Visit website

Imperial Rooster

Rebbe’s Orkestra
Visit website

Robert Hoberg

Saltine Ramblers

Ticket Purchase

Tickets are $25 before June 1st; $30 after or at door. Tickets include free camping on Friday and Saturday night.

Wild Spirit Wolf Sanctuary – Wolfstock

Wild Spirit Wolf Sanctuary – Visit – Directions

Wild Spirit Wolf Sanctuary – Visit – Directions

Bobcatpalooza – April 5, 6 & 12

I’m literally a day late with this, but you can still make events in Santa Fe and Las Cruces. [hat tip to MK Ray]

Bobcatpalooza – April 5-12 | New Mexico Wilderness Alliance

Bobcatpalooza – April 5-12

Published April 5, 2011 in News.

Bobcats, the elusive but ubiquitous wild felines, are a vital carnivore species across the North American continent. However, these cats are threatened in New Mexico by reckless and mismanaged leg-hold trapping on public lands.

Join APNM, WildEarth Guardians, Sierra Club, and Southwest Environmental Center in celebrating these beautiful, misunderstood wild cats at our Bobcatpalooza tour, featuring Kevin Hansen, author of Bobcat: Master of Survival.

Albuquerque – April 5th, 6-8pm
South Broadway Cultural Center –
Multipurpose Room 
1025 Broadway Blvd SE 
Special guests: Ambassador animals from the Wildlife Center of Española
Free food & drink

Santa Fe – April 6th, 6-8pm
Santa Fe Public Library – Community Room 
145 Washington St 
Special guests: Ambassador animals from the Wildlife Center of Española

Las Cruces – April 12th, 6-8pm
Southwest Environmental Center 
275 Downtown Mall
Free food & drink

All events will feature a presentation by Kevin Hansen, wildlife biologist and Las Cruces resident, on bobcat biology and ways to protect these amazing creatures. Also featuring presentations by WildEarth Guardians and Sierra Club on threats to wildlife and humans from trapping and how you can protect yourself, your pets, and your public lands.

To RSVP or more info on Bobcatpalooza events, please contact APNM’s Wildlife Campaign Manager or call (505) 265-2322.

Bobcatpalooza – April 5-12 | New Mexico Wilderness Alliance

Kevin Hansen, renowned bobcat biologist and author of “Bobcats: Masters of Survival” will speak. And because leg-hold traps are an unfortunate part of the bobcat’s world these days, there will be information about trapping and demonstrations about how to open a trap for pet and human safety. Plus there will be ambassador animals and refreshments!

» Bingaman Preparing Omnibus Lands Bill for Lame Duck Session — New Mexico Wilderness Alliance »

» Bingaman Preparing Omnibus Lands Bill for Lame Duck Session — New Mexico Wilderness Alliance »

Patrick Reis, E&E reporter
http://www.eenews.net/

11/12/2010 – Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chairman Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) is hoping to pass a package of public lands and wilderness bills during the lame-duck session of Congress.

Bingaman’s panel has sent more than 60 bills to the floor this session that would create new national parks, monuments, wilderness areas and wildlife sanctuaries. Now he’s hoping to bundle them into an omnibus measure for Senate passage before the 111th Congress adjourns, spokesman Bill Wicker confirmed today.

» Bingaman Preparing Omnibus Lands Bill for Lame Duck Session — New Mexico Wilderness Alliance »

Cibola National Forest Waives Recreation, Overnight Camping Fees Saturday 9/25/10

ABQNews: Cibola National Forest Waives Recreation, Overnight Camping Fees Saturday

The fees are being waived in celebration of National Public Lands Day

Recreation fees and overnight camping fees are being waived Saturday (Sept. 25) on the Cibola National Forest and the Black Kettle and McClellan Creek National Grasslands for National Public Lands Day.

The Cibola National Forest made the announcement Tuesday in a news release.

The news release said, however, that any reservations made and paid for through the national reservation system will not be waived.

The Cibola National Forest offers mountain ranges scattered east and south of Albuquerque and west to New Mexico’s border with Arizona, according to the news release. The Cibola includes four wilderness areas — Sandia Mountain, Manzano Mountain, Apache Kid and Withington Wilderness.

For more information, contact Mark Chavez or Nancy Brunswick at the Cibola National Forest Supervisor’s Office at 505-346-3900.

ABQNews: Cibola National Forest Waives Recreation, Overnight Camping Fees Saturday

County To Consider 570 Acres of Open Space

ABQJOURNAL NEWS/METRO: County To Consider 570 Acres of Open Space

By Dan McKay
Copyright © 2010 Albuquerque Journal
Journal Staff Writer
          The old Price’s Dairy land is among the last of its kind — 570 contiguous acres of hay and bird habitat, all just a few miles from Downtown Albuquerque.
        But conservationists fear it may not stay that way forever. This massive chunk of open space, they say, is simply too tempting for developers to pass up.
        The cost of public acquisition, however, won’t be low, perhaps topping $20 million. Earmarking the first public funds could come later this month.
        Price’s Dairy is "one of the largest remaining farms in the Middle Rio Grande," said Greg Hiner of the nonprofit Trust for Public Land. "Preserving it now is key while we have a chance. Once it’s gone, that’ll be it."
        The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service is in the early stages of considering whether to propose the property as a national wildlife refuge. It would be the first urban refuge in the Southwest.

ABQJOURNAL NEWS/METRO: County To Consider 570 Acres of Open Space

It’s a beautiful chunk of land that should remain open and become public space. You’ll hear the penny-pinchers whining about tough economic times, but they whine even when we’re flush. This is a good investment for the people of New Mexico.

ATVs–ORVs PITAs

Although ATVs are as aggravating as lawnmowers, if they stick to the dirt roads, I’ll put up with them. But off-road, no. But, then, I hate bicycles on trails, too, though at least they disturb the peace for a shorter time.

ABQJOURNAL OPINION/GUEST_COLUMNS: Rogue Riders Spoil Forest for Rest of Us

By Kevin Stillman
Jemez Springs resident

Today, the weather is still great, but the elk are gone. Meadows and hillsides are rutted from off-road vehicle use. And, from every mountaintop, you hear the roar of motors.

        The old logging roads that had been filling in with grass now are taken over by dirt bikes and filled with tire ruts. When the old logging roads weren’t enough for the off-road riders, outlaws carved illegal trails through meadows, valleys and creeks.

        When that wasn’t enough, off-road enthusiasts tore down private property signs, cut people’s fences and extended their illegal trails from the national forest through adjoining private lands.

        The once-beautiful area that I’d known as a haven for wildlife, hunters, hikers and campers has become a zone of destructive, often-illegal off-road vehicle use.

        Today’s forest is filled with constant conflict. … These conflicts run much deeper than the familiar problems of too many people playing in the forest.

        While some off-roaders are respectful, many are not. Some have threatened landowners who try to keep off-roaders off their property. Gangs of dirt bikers have even harassed volunteer groups working on Forest Service trail projects.

        Something needs to be done to protect our public and private land, watersheds and wildlife from the destructive behavior of off-roaders. New Mexicans have a new opportunity to take decisive action to protect the forest they love.

        Right now, Forest Service officials are drafting a travel management plan for the Santa Fe National Forest. That plan will identify certain trails that off-road vehicles can use for years to come while protecting forest trails and areas where off-road vehicles don’t belong.

        The stakes are high — for New Mexicans and the Santa Fe National Forest. …

ABQJOURNAL OPINION/GUEST_COLUMNS: Rogue Riders Spoil Forest for Rest of Us

I’ve had a few encounters with ATV and dirt bikes that were no worse than any other vehicle. They slowed down and were friendly. But I’ve also almost been run off the road by a wild loony. And even the nicest ATV driver is still riding a noise generator that RUINS my outdoor experience long before and after passing.

We need good electric ATVs with solar chargers – then ban *all* gas-powered transport off-road on public lands.

New Mexico’s Cougars at Risk

I’m pretty sure there was another 10-year study prior to the one mentioned in this article (Hornacker?). That tactic appears to be to fund long studies, reject the findings, kill what you want. If you want to see a buncha good-old-boys slapping each other’s backs, go to a Game Commission meeting. You can’t tell the outfitters from the Commissioners. Just like the end of Animal Farm.

ABQJOURNAL OPINION/GUEST_COLUMNS: Proposed Rules Will Wipe Out N.M.’s Cougars

By Wendy Keefover-Ring
WildEarth Guardians
          The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish wants to wage war on the state’s cougars, but that will not make people or livestock safer, nor create more deer, elk or bighorn sheep for hunters. The government’s proposal focuses heavily on female cougars, and that will mean it will more quickly wipe out these majestic cats.
        As part of a perfect storm for cougars, Game and Fish also seeks to limit the public’s right to object by restricting access to the rule-making process.
        Right now, the public can weigh in on cougar-kill quotas every two years. But Game and Fish wants to move to a four-year, decision-making cycle that would effectively cut the public and even the Game Commission — the rule-making body that oversees the agency — out of the process.
        In comparison, most, if not all, Western states review cougar quotas annually. New Mexico’s cougars could very well be wiped out before our right to object comes around again.
        Game and Fish’s 2010 proposals represent a radical departure from years of prudent stewardship encouraged by the Gov. Bill Richardson administration.
        Game and Fish disposed of a comprehensive 10-year, peer-reviewed study on cougars, conducted in New Mexico and authored by Kenneth Logan and Linda Sweanor and hailed by U.S. conservation biologists as a seminal work. This $1 million study, paid for by New Mexicans, disappointed the agency because its data suggested that the cougar population was far lower than what was expedient for the agency.
        Undaunted, in 2010 Game and Fish threw out the Logan and Sweanor study and now relies on a student’s unfinished, unpublished and unavailable four-year study that the agency claims determines that the population is significantly larger than Logan and Sweanor had estimated. On top of that, Game and Fish assessed a high level of kill — by using a Wyoming study that it has grossly misinterpreted.
        Combined, these unscientific approaches provided Game and Fish with the "basis" for its extreme quota of 1,180 cougars per year, a 140 percent increase from the 490 figure used in 2008.
        Killing females particularly harms the population because they provide the resiliency needed to overcome overhunting. Further, with the death of mother cats, dependent kittens will likely suffer starvation and death after orphaning.
        To protect breeding females, in 2008 the New Mexico Game Commission unanimously approved measures to protect mothers and their kittens while continuing to allow limited sport hunting. The commission narrowed the total number of females that could be killed in each hunting zone, and it ordered an online education program that teaches hunters to differentiate between the male and female cats.
        But now Game and Fish wants to kill over 457 females annually, an astonishing 263 percent increase over the 2008 level of 126.
        Intuitively, it might seem like killing cougars would protect human safety, but there is no evidence that shows that sport hunting cougars makes people safer, according to "Cougar Management Guidelines" — a publication authored by 13 cougar biologists and reviewed by 30 others. In fact, abundant research indicates the exact opposite is true. By overhunting a cougar population, the age structure changes to one that is younger and more socially unstable. In other words, killing cougars might actually increase the number of harmful encounters between cougars, humans and even livestock.
        A far more prudent way to protect people and livestock is through education. Recreationists and those who live in cougar country can take common sense precautions while outside, such as traveling in groups, walking with young children in hand and keeping dogs on leashes. Furthermore, livestock growers can use non-lethal means to protect livestock from cougar attacks.
        Instead of waging war on cougars, we call upon the Game Commission to reject Game and Fish’s radical quota proposal and keep it at the 2008 level of 490; continue the biennial review process; make the online hunter education program mandatory to protect breeding females and kittens. We call upon Game and Fish to ramp up its nascent but promising Cougar Smart New Mexico program that promotes human-cougar coexistence.
        The vast majority of New Mexicans appreciate the beauty, majesty and charisma of cougars. New Mexican voters know that cougars are an important component of our natural heritage. In fact, New Mexican wildlife watchers far exceed other forms of wildlife recreation, including hunting.
        Cougars must be preserved for future generations and not squandered for short-sighted, ill purpose.
        Also signed by Phil Carter of Animal Protection of New Mexico and Mary Katherine Ray of Sierra Club, Rio Grande Chapter

ABQJOURNAL OPINION/GUEST_COLUMNS: Proposed Rules Will Wipe Out N.M.’s Cougars

Ortiz Mountain Ranch – Cerrillos Hills State Park: Wild Horse Sanctuary

Richardson uses stimulus money to buy Ortiz Mountain Ranch « New Mexico Independent

By Gwyneth Doland 9/16/10 4:22 PM

Governor Richardson today announced that he is using $2.8 million in federal stimulus money to purchase 12,142 acres of land known as the Ortiz Mountain Ranch to expand Cerrillos Hills State Park and create a wild horse sanctuary.

The property had recently been listed for $3.4 million. According to the broker’s website, the property was owned by the Ball family, of canning jar fame, until 2004, when it was donated to the Nature Conservancy.

“The Galisteo Basin is one of New Mexico’s crown jewels,” Governor Bill Richardson said Thursday in a press release. “I am pleased that the Recovery Act has provided the means for a long-term investment in the land that will provide the public with opportunities for recreation, and support our local economy by supporting jobs, and promoting tourism.”

The state has entered into a purchase agreement with the Nature Conservancy and a private owner, the release said.

Richardson uses stimulus money to buy Ortiz Mountain Ranch « New Mexico Independent

New Series of Maps of New Mexico’s Public Lands

ABQJOURNAL GO: Find your way to out-of-the-way places

From Journal Reports
          If you like to explore the very most back roads of New Mexico, a new series of outdoor recreation maps for the state has been published by the Albuquerque-based Public Lands Interpretive Association.
        The series of six maps provides detailed road information on a shaded relief base. The maps show recreation sites in national forests, BLM and state lands, national parks and monuments. Also, wildlife refuges, land ownership (public and private), hunting units and other jurisdictional boundaries, special management units such as wilderness areas, GPS grids, campgrounds, museums and other attractions.
        The scale of the maps is 1:375,000. The reverse side of each map provides general information about public lands, helpful hints, rules and regulations, land use ethics, emergency and contact numbers and outdoor destination opportunities available in New Mexico.
        The maps were created out of a partnership between the Public Lands Interpretive Association, the New Mexico State BLM Office and the U.S. Department of Transportation.
        "We felt there was a need for affordable maps to outdoor destinations in New Mexico; maps that had the latest and most reliable information about where to go and how to get there," said Public Lands Interpretive Association spokesman Bill Tefft.
        The maps are priced at $6.95 each (or $34.75 for the set of six) and are available in outdoors stores and at other locations throughout the state, from the Public Lands Interpretive Association in Albuquerque at 505-345-9498 or online at www.publiclands.org. [NM Maps, etc: New Mexico | Public Lands Information Center | Books and Maps]

ABQJOURNAL GO: Find your way to out-of-the-way places

Two Wolves Killed in Past Month – Act Now to Save the Lobo — New Mexico Wilderness Alliance

» Two Wolves Killed in Past Month – Act Now to Save the Lobo — New Mexico Wilderness Alliance »

Updated: 7.13.2010 by Rachel

On July 1, the US Fish and Wildlife Service reported the shooting death of the alpha male from the Hawks’ Nest Pack in eastern Arizona.

Last week, the alpha male of the San Mateo Pack in New Mexico was found dead under suspicious circumstances. Both killings are under investigation by the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

Environmental groups are offering up to an additional $40,000 to the Fish and Wildlife Service’s $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of those involved with the deplorable killing of these wolves.

CLICK HERE to download the reward poster– and repost in your neighborhood or place of work.

This latest blow to the Mexican wolf reintroduction effort brings home the importance of supporting wolf conservation and public education efforts. NMWA is contributing to the cause with the launch of our Mexican Wolf Stamp program, which will raise awareness and raise funds for groups working in Mexican gray wolf conservation. Please click here to learn more about the 2011 Wolf Stamp.

In addition, the organization Lobos of the Southwest has started a letter-writing campaign in response to these latest crimes against  wild wolves. CLICK HERE TO VISIT THEIR WEBSITE and get involved.

» Two Wolves Killed in Past Month – Act Now to Save the Lobo — New Mexico Wilderness Alliance »

Traps, Snares Threaten N.M. Wolf Population

Monday, July 05, 2010
Traps, Snares Threaten N.M. Wolf Population
By Mary Katherine Ray
Wildlife Chair, Rio Grande Chapter Sierra Club
          Highly endangered Mexican wolves are being harmed by legally set leg-hold traps. These devices are illegal on public land on the Arizona side of the wolf reintroduction area but not in New Mexico.
        Since the reintroduction began, 12 wolves on our side have been trapped by accident or mistake. Several of those have sustained injuries to their paws or legs including lost toes as a result. Two have had to have their legs amputated.
        One of the still-living, three-legged lobos is the alpha male of the Middle Fork pack. His mate is also three-legged from an unknown cause.
        The case of the other amputee, M1039, is special to me.
        We live near the wolf recovery area in New Mexico and were delighted to learn that a lone collared male wolf was exploring the nearby forest. It was winter, though, the time when fur trappers lay their hidden menaces.
        Not long after, we noticed a helicopter flying low up and down the canyons. It did this for hours as if looking for something. It turned out that M1039 had indeed stepped into a trap set for something else and had managed to detach it from its anchor chain.
        He was now free to escape the place where the trap had been hidden, but he could not escape the trap.
        He had to be found, which required the helicopter, so he could be captured for medical care. But the trap had been clenched on him for too long and the leg had to go.
        M1039 was released back to the wild but went missing within a year and is now presumed dead. He had no pack mates to help him hunt. Having only three legs could have been so compromising he just couldn’t survive alone.
        The lobo population in New Mexico is down to only 15 animals; a reduction by nearly half from the prior year. No one knows why it fell so much, but with leg-hold traps and snares legally allowed where wolves can be, the threat is just one more of the human-caused reasons that keep our wolf population from thriving.
        Wolves in the Southwest were exterminated decades ago by people thinking they were making our wild lands safe for livestock. At last, we realize how important wolves are for the balance of nature and a functioning ecosystem and are restoring them to the Gila region where they belong.
        With so few wolves, it is imperative that no threat be overlooked or deemed inconsequential. Traps and snares are a threat to them and I fervently hope the Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will respond favorably to petitions filed by WildEarth Guardians, the Sierra Club, the Southwest Environmental Center and others to prohibit these cruel devices where wolves should be roaming freely.

ABQJOURNAL OPINION/GUEST_COLUMNS: Traps, Snares Threaten N.M. Wolf Population