Santa Fe National Forest Travel Management Rule

Santa Fe National Forest needs your
input on the Travel Management Rule.

The Rule is intended to limit the use of off road vehicles
in the forest. This is your chance to have a say on which trails
will be free of noise, exhaust fumes, dust and erosion and which
will be reserved for Wildlife and quiet recreation.  Please
attend the Public Meetings this week. The forest needs your
support!

JEMEZ SPRINGS: Wednesday
August 22nd 6 to 8 PM

Walatowa Vistor Center
7413
Hwy 4
Jemez Pueblo, NM

ALBUQUERQUE:
Thursday August 23rd 6 to 8 PM

UNM Continuing
Education Building
1634 University Blvd. Room
C
Albuquerque, NM

For more information call Craig or Scial at 505-843-8696.
E-mail craig@nmwild.org  or scial@nmwild.org

Powered by ScribeFire.

Photo on New West

Many thanks to Chris Lombardi for picking one of my photos for the New West Images photoblog.

Riding the Continental Divide Trail

If you’re coming from that link, look around here before heading over to my photos on flickr. mjh

New West Network | Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming
http://www.newwest.net/

New West Images
http://www.newwest.net/index.php/gallery/

Conejos Journal – July 2007

Nine years ago, Merri and I took Lucky Dog and our new-used truck and camper nearly 5,000 miles (round-trip) up the Rockies as far as Hinton, Alberta. We were gone nearly 5 weeks. Since then, each year, we take a “long” trip — shorter every year. This year: a couple hundred miles north for 6 nights. Not that it wasn’t beautiful and fun.

Mer and I camped and hiked with friends in the area of the South San Juan Wilderness and the Conejos River in south-central Colorado. The following is my journal with a link to photos at the end. peace, mjh

Day 1 – Tuesday, June 26, 2007
Conejos Valley, Colorado
Lake Fork Campground #18

It’s just after 10pm. I’m up about as late as I usually am at home, though I won’t be up as late as I was last night, with last minute prep of burgers and guacamole. Everyone has retired, perchance to dream. I’m sitting in our new used camper, my headlamp illuminating the keyboard as I type, mindful of my laptop’s battery limit of just over an hour. Make it snappy. (Often good advice for a writer.)

Continue reading Conejos Journal – July 2007

Grappling with Fear

Following a link from “cred,” I ran across this article. Wolf supporters should read this and think about the situation. The reintroduction of the wolf will only succeed if everyone understands what it involves and we all do what we can to make it work for everyone reasonable.

I feel some compassion for people who are afraid of the wolf, especially anyone who has had a wolf march into their yard or kill a pet. At the same time, wolves will learn to avoid and fear people, as most wildlife does. It’s going to take time and some work, something ranchers are well-acquainted with. Times and conditions change and you adjust to those changes. mjh

Catron County Wolf pages – articles of interest
Under Siege in Wolf Country
The Mexican Gray Wolf: Killers and Thieves of Peace of Mind
copyright 2006 Lif C Strand

http://www.catroncounty.net/wolfhotline/articles/index.htm

[mjh: Arizona Game and Fish has an interesting page on the Mexican gray wolf, with photos.]

Mexican Wolf Conservation and Management
http://www.azgfd.gov/w_c/es/wolf_reintroduction.shtml

Save the Lobo

ABQjournal NM: Public Input Sought on Wolf Rules, By Arthur H. Rotstein, The Associated Press

TUCSON— Federal wildlife officials hope the public will suggest ways to revamp and improve the troubled program to recover and reintroduce Mexican gray wolves along the Arizona-New Mexico border.
The program has been under fire from both environmentalists and ranchers.
Conservationists and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson are angered because of the number of wolves that federal agents have killed or removed after preying on cattle.
Many ranchers within the recovery area, particularly in New Mexico’s Catron County, have fiercely opposed the recovery effort since its inception in 1998, calling the program a nightmare that won’t go away.
“There are a lot of things that we could change about it to make it better, and we’d like to hear from people about what they think should be changed to make it better,” said U.S. Fish and Wildlife spokeswoman Elizabeth Slown.
Fish and Wildlife on Tuesday published in the Federal Register a notice of intent to take steps to potentially modify the rule that established the wolf program.
It will hold a dozen public meetings in November and December in Arizona and New Mexico and take public comments until the end of the year.
Afterward, the agency will draft a proposed amended rule, a draft environmental impact statement and a socio-economic assessment.
In a release, Benjamin Tuggle, the agency’s Southwest regional director, said the process “will provide an incredible opportunity for the public to collaborate in the future of wolf recovery in Arizona and New Mexico.”
A section of the Endangered Species Act allows “more flexibility to work with communities in managing experimental populations such as the Mexican wolf,” Tuggle said. “We have learned many lessons through the adaptive management process since establishing the program and recognize it is time for adjustments to be considered.”
In 1998, Fish and Wildlife introduced seven captive-bred endangered Mexican gray wolves into their historic range within the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area.
It encompasses 4.4 million acres of the Apache-Sitgreaves and Gila national forests in Arizona and New Mexico, plus the 1.6 million-acre White Mountain Apache reservation in Arizona.
The intent was to have about 100 wild wolves living in the recovery area by last year. But the latest annual count found 59 wolves in Arizona and New Mexico, “and it waxes and wanes” through the year, Slown said.
She said about 10 animals have died, been killed or removed so far this year, with about an equal number of pups born.
“Everything is on the table,” Slown said. “We really want for people to come with an open mind and tell us. We will take their input and put it into a proposal.”
She said the process could take two to three years to change the rule.
http://www.abqjournal.com/news/state/584541nm08-08-07.htm
– – – – –

ABQjournal Opinion: Forget the Hysteria, Get Real on Wolves, By Gene Tatum, President, Albuquerque Wildlife Federation

Are you a lobo fan?
It’s hard to travel anywhere in New Mexico without seeing the University of New Mexico’s mascot— the lobo. Plastered on bumper stickers, store windows, hats and T-shirts, the image of a wolf paw or snarling “Louie Lobo” reminds everyone we’re proud of our unique state.
Since 1920 the lobo has been UNM’s official mascot. That was about the time our real-life lobo, also called the Mexican wolf, was purposely exterminated from the United States through a federal poisoning and trapping operation.
But in 1998 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service sought to right this wrong-headed extermination by reintroducing 11 endangered lobos into the remote border region between southern New Mexico and Arizona.
It was hoped these 11 lobos would grow into a population of 100 by the end of 2006, after which the federal lobo restoration program would no longer be necessary. These animals would represent the world’s only known lobo population.
But today, nearly a decade later, only six mating pairs of endangered lobos live in the wild, and the program is plagued by political conflicts between the cattle industry and federal, state and county agencies.
To make matters even worse, someone in southern New Mexico has been illegally killing lobos. In fact, so far the number of illegally poached lobos is greater than those that have died from natural causes, vehicle accidents and unknown causes combined.
As an Albuquerque-based volunteer organization that works to improve wildlife habitat throughout New Mexico, the Albuquerque Wildlife Federation, is seriously concerned about the lack of progress in the lobo restoration program.
It is clear that unless this situation is turned around, New Mexico will be facing a second extinction of the lobo. This would be incredibly shameful.
As such, the Albuquerque Wildlife Federation proposes:
# An honest discussion about the economics of lobo recovery take place. To date the number of cattle killed by lobos represents a fraction of all cattle in New Mexico and Arizona, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Given that ranchers who can establish that wolves took their livestock are compensated for the full market value of their animals, the New Mexico livestock industry should document why this arrangement is unsatisfactory.

# An honest discussion about the threats lobos pose to people. There has never been a documented case of a wolf killing a human being in U.S. history. Yet in a recent session of U.S. Congress, Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M., told colleagues that “blood will be on your hands” if they opposed his elimination of funding for lobo restoration. Furthermore, some residents of Catron County have claimed they suffer from “post-traumatic stress disorder” after seeing lobos. Is there any hard data backing up either of these claims?

# The benefits of lobos also be weighed. Lobos help prevent elk and other big game from overgrazing their habitat, which causes harm to water, other wildlife and cattle. Wolf-related tourism can also be an economic boon, as the appearance of wolves in Yellowstone National Park has generated $70 million for its surrounding communities.
Not surprisingly, our beautiful state was the birthplace for the pioneering conservation ideals of Aldo Leopold, who started his career in the early 1900s down in the Gila country. In fact, he helped found the Albuquerque Wildlife Federation in 1914.
Some of Leopold’s ideals were shaped by his experiences with lobos, as he writes in his story “Thinking Like a Mountain,” in which he describes his misguided shooting of a lobo:
“We reached the old wolf in time to watch a fierce green fire dying in her eyes. I realized then, and have known ever since, that there was something new to me in those eyes— something known only to her and to the mountain. I was young then, and full of trigger-itch; I thought that because fewer wolves meant more deer, that no wolves would mean hunters’ paradise. But after seeing the green fire die, I sensed that neither the wolf nor the mountain agreed with such a view.”
We thank Gov. Bill Richardson for his recent actions supporting lobo recovery, and now call upon our other New Mexico representatives, wildlife agencies, and fellow citizens to push hysteria aside, use common sense, and keep the “fierce green fire” of lobos in our state.
http://www.abqjournal.com/opinion/guest_columns/584440opinion08-08-07.htm
– – – – –

Center for Biological Diversity – Press Release

Due to politically driven limits on the areas where wolves can freely roam, poor management of livestock on public lands, and overly liberal recapture and kill rules, the wild Mexican wolf population is 55 or fewer today — well short of the recovery program goal of 102 wolves by 2006. Federal agents have killed or permanently removed 53 wolves from the program since 1998. Government killing of wolves began in 2003, reached a peak of five wolves in 2006, and is already at three wolves in 2007.

Potential new rules identified by the Fish and Wildlife Service include 1) allowing wolves to roam outside the designated recovery area (also known as the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area), 2) allowing direct reintroduction of wolves into New Mexico, 3) changing the current definition of “problem” and “nuisance’ wolves’ to exclude those which scavenge on dead cattle, and 4) reviewing other recovery actions requested by the Center for Biological Diversity in a 2004 legal petition. …

On June 10th, 2007, almost 600 attendees of the annual meeting of the American Society of Mammalogists passed a resolution calling on the Fish and Wildlife Service “to suspend all predator control directed at Mexican gray wolves at least until the interim 100-wolf goal of the current reintroduction program has been achieved … to protect wolves from the consequences of scavenging on livestock carcasses, ensure the recovery and sustainability of populations of Mexican gray wolves, and allow wolves to roam freely throughout the Southwest.”

On June 28, 2007, nine scientists, including retired U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Mexican Wolf Recovery Coordinator David Parsons, wrote a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service complaining that the recovery program has missed its goal of 102 wolves by nearly 50 percent. They blamed the failure on the high level of killing and removal by federal agents: “For the past four years, growth of the wolf population has been limited by management-related killing or permanent removal of wolves.”
http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/press/mexican-wolves-08-07-2007.html
– – – – –

[from nmwild.org]

Wolf Public Meeting August 13, 2007
PLEASE COME TO CONGRESSMAN STEVE PEARCE’S “LISTENING SESSION” IN SILVER CITY

YOUR VOICE IS NEEDED TO SUPPORT THE MEXICAN WOLF RECOVERY EFFORTS

What: “Listening Session” on the Wolf Recovery Program
When: Monday, August 13th from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. (please arrive at 2:30 to ensure good seating)
Where: Grant County Council Chambers
1400 Highway 180
Silver City, NM 88061

Congressman Steve Pearce has had it out for Southwest wolves for years — aggressively campaigning against the recovery program and trying to manipulate his constituents and Congress with misinformation and sensationalism. Now he’s holding an in-district “listening session” on Southwest wolves next Monday in Silver City.

Tell him – and the Fish and Wildlife Service – that New Mexicans support wolf reintroduction.

Pearce expects his constituents to show up and tell the Fish and Wildlife Service and other agencies what he wants them to hear: that New Mexicans hate wolves, that they’re afraid of them and that they want wolf recovery efforts to stop.

But when it comes to wolves, Pearce is dead wrong. All public polls in New Mexico and Arizona have shown that the majority of folks support wolf recovery. Attend Monday’s meeting and help set the record straight.

See it on a map.
http://maps.google.com/maps?ie=UTF8&q=1400+Highway+180++Silver+City,+NM&ll=32.780492,-108.289962&spn=0.008118,0.014462&z=16&iwloc=addr&om=1

Pearce recently introduced an amendment that would end the Southwest wolf program entirely, making the outrageous claim on the House floor that “the most provocative sound to a wolf is a crying baby or a laughing baby,” and warning that it’s just a matter of time until a wolf catches a child.

Thanks to the help of activists like you, Congress didn’t fall for these old myths and soundly defeated his anti-wolf amendment 258 to 172. But Pearce is back on the warpath with his latest political maneuver: to get New Mexicans to go on the record against wolf reintroduction.

Please, come out and attend Monday’s meeting to help counter the lies and to show the world that New Mexicans want wolves in our state.

http://ga1.org/nmwildaction/notice-description.tcl?newsletter_id=5840551

Aztec Ruins National Monument, New Mexico

Aztec Ruins National Monument – Directions (U.S. National Park Service)

“Aztec Ruins National Monument is located on Ruins Road about 1/2 mile north of New Mexico Highway 516, in the City of Aztec, New Mexico.”

http://www.nps.gov/azru/planyourvisit/directions.htm

Aztec Ruins National Monument – Operating Hours & Seasons (U.S. National Park Service)

“Aztec Ruins National Monument is open 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. most of the year and 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Memorial Day through Labor Day. The park is closed Thanksgiving, December 25th, and January 1st.”

http://www.nps.gov/azru/planyourvisit/hours.htm

Aztec Ruins National Monument – Fees & Reservations (U.S. National Park Service)

“Entrance to the park is $5.00 per person for anyone over fifteen years old. Entrance passes are good for seven days. Kids fifteen and under get in free.” [mjh: various passes admitted for free.]

http://www.nps.gov/azru/planyourvisit/feesandreservations.htm

www.nps.gov/azru

The Pride of Catron County

Catron County: Groups aim to overturn wolf law

The federal government has been reintroducing the wolves to the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area — 4.4 million acres of the Gila and Apache Sitgreaves national forests in southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona plus Arizona’s 1.6 million-acre White Mountain Apache reservation, interspersed with private land and towns.

The program began March 29, 1998, when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service released 11 wolves that were bred in captivity.

The recovery area had 59 wolves as of January 2007 [mjh: That’s +48 wolves in 9 years.], and that number has fluctuated with wolf deaths and removals and the births of pups, said Elizabeth Slown, a Fish and Wildlife Service spokeswoman in Albuquerque.

The agency conducts one count of wild wolves annually.

By the end of June, only 26 wolves could be located [mjh: Is that -33 wolves in 6 months? Something doesn’t add up, but anyway you count it, this program is a miserable failure in large part because of local opposition.] through radio telemetry, the lawsuit said.
http://www.freenewmexican.com/news/65651.html

New Utah Map

Map elevated: New guide out to Utah’s roads, trails, By Mike Gorrell, The Salt Lake Tribune

A new official state highway map is out, emphasizing the “Utah – Life Elevated” promotional theme to attract more tourists. Free copies of the new state highway map may be obtained by calling the Utah Department of Transportation at 965-4000.

http://www.sltrib.com/ci_6475583

Range Creek, Utah (Fremonts)

Utah Division of Wildlife Resources – Range Creek

Information: Conditions at Range Creek as of July 8, 2007
Range Creek Wildlife Management Area hiking permits are available online.

HIDDEN IN THE BOOK CLIFFS of Emery County between the Tavaputs Plateau and the Green River, Range Creek valley was once the site of numerous Fremont Indian villages. Until recently, this remote canyon was private property and was off-limits to the general public. Because of its isolation, the thousand-year-old Fremont Indian artifacts are numerous and well-preserved. Recently, the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources obtained ownership to this remarkable area and implemented a policy of limited public access.

http://www.wildlife.utah.gov/range_creek/

Salt Lake Tribune – Hidden treasures, By Brett Prettyman
Conservation officers protect and explore a wealth of ancient Fremont Indian rock art and artifacts at Range Creek Canyon

http://www.sltrib.com/travel/ci_3880827

Another Animal Slaughtered

ABQjournal NM: Bear Killed After Boy Bitten
The Associated Press

RATON— Game officers killed a small black bear believed to have bitten a 13-year-old boy camping at Sugarite Canyon State Park near Raton, a spokesman for the state Game and Fish Department said Tuesday.

The bear was killed with a shotgun blast about 4 p.m. Monday afternoon and its head was sent to the state laboratory in Albuquerque to be tested for rabies, Dan Williams said.

The boy, Matthew Ortiz from Raton, is undergoing rabies treatment as a precaution, Williams said. The teen was not seriously hurt.

State law requires rabies testing on any wild animal that bites or scratches a person and breaks the skin, Williams said.

He said the bear, which weighed about 100 pounds, was shot near the Soda Pocket Campground where the boy was bitten early Sunday.

“Judging from the size of the bear and the size of the tracks and other things at the scene like the tooth marks and their distance from the ground, they determined it was very, very, very likely it was the bear that bit the boy,” Williams said. [mjh: Is this the new standard for slaughter: very, very, very likely.]

The teen heard something brush against his tent about 2:20 a.m. Sunday and slapped the side, thinking a relative was playing a trick. He apparently slapped the bear, which bit his hand and ran away, state parks officials said.

They believe the bear was searching for food.”

http://www.abqjournal.com/news/state/577423nm07-11-07.htm

ABQjournal NM: Around New Mexico
Bear That Bit Boy Didn’t Have Rabies [mjh: oops!]

RATON— A small black bear believed to have bitten a 13-year-old boy camping at Sugarite Canyon State Park near Raton did not have rabies, a spokesman for the state Game and Fish Department said Wednesday.

The bear was killed with a shotgun blast Monday afternoon and its head was sent to the state laboratory in Albuquerque, where it was tested for rabies. The results were negative, Dan Williams said.

The boy, Matthew Ortiz from Raton, was not seriously hurt but underwent rabies treatment as a precaution.”

http://www.abqjournal.com/news/state/577659nm07-12-07.htm

The teen was more than 50% responsible for this: he provoked the bear. And the bear was brutally slaughtered with a SHOTGUN. Who are these wildlife killers? mjh

Birds seen on Southern Colorado camping trip, 27-30 June 2007

Red-tailed Hawk
Spotted Sandpiper
Broad-tailed Hummingbird
Northern (Red-shafted) Flicker
Warbling Vireo
Gray Jay
Common Raven
Violet-green Swallow
Cliff Swallow
Mountain Chickadee
American Dipper
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
Hermit Thrush
American Robin
Yellow-rumped (Audubon’s) Warbler
MacGillivray’s Warbler
Wilson’s Warbler
Chipping Sparrow
Fox Sparrow
Lincoln’s Sparrow
White-crowned Sparrow
Dark-eyed (Gray-headed) Junco
Pine Grosbeak
Cassin’s Finch
Pine Siskin

Radio Piece on Chaco Canyon, New Mexico

NPR : Ancient Culture Prompts Worry for Arid Southwest, by Richard Harris
All Things Considered, July 9, 2007

Chaco Canyon is a stark and breathtaking ruin, nestled under soaring, red sandstone cliffs. [read or listen to this piece…]

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=11826985

Endangered Falcons Released in New Mexico

ABQJOURNAL NEWS/STATE: Endangered Falcons Released in New Mexico, By Susan Montoya Bryan/

Associated Press

WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE — An effort to reintroduce an endangered bird to the skies of southern New Mexico has taken another leap forward as 11 captive-bred aplomado falcon chicks got the first glimpse of their new home. …

The falcons are the second set being released in New Mexico as part of a recovery effort by the nonprofit Peregrine Fund, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and state, federal and private land managers.

Expectations for the program are high since the last set, released in August 2006 on media mogul Ted Turner’s Armendaris Ranch east of Truth or Consequences, went on to produce at least one nesting pair and some wild-born chicks.

Biologists showed off the 11 chicks Friday at the Rio Grande Nature Center in Albuquerque before trucking them south in cardboard boxes to a remote site that straddles the western edge of White Sands Missile Range and state and Bureau of Land Management land. …

After successful reintroduction efforts in South Texas, The Peregrine Fund shifted its focus to West Texas in 2002 and to New Mexico in August 2006.

Those efforts appear to be paying off since nests were spotted this spring in both states.

Biologists were especially excited when they witnessed some of the wild-born chicks leaving one of the West Texas nests, marking the first fledging of aplomado chicks in that area in almost a century.

The Peregrine Fund plans to release more than 100 falcons in New Mexico and West Texas this summer. In New Mexico, another release is planned for the Armendaris, which offers 360,000 acres of grama grass, yucca, mesquite and insects — perfect for the falcons.

The falcons displayed Friday were born in captivity at The Peregrine Fund’s breeding facility in Idaho. They fall under a special provision of the Endangered Species Act.

http://www.abqjournal.com/news/state/apfalcons07-07-07.htm

Open Meetings on NFS Travel Management Rules

As a way to reign off-road vehicle abuses and excesses, the Forest Service put forth the Travel Management Rule allowing each National Forest to designate what routes are open to motorized travel. The Sandia Ranger District of the Cibola National Forest is having another round of meetings on Tuesday, July 10 in Albuquerque and Wednesday, July 11 in Tijeras. They will have maps showing their proposed route designations. Critical input from those that support wild places and quiet recreation is crucial. If you have questions or comments, please contact Craig Chapman, craig@nmwild.org, 505-843-8696.

Tuesday, July 10th, 6-9 p.m. at the Albuquerque Convention Center in the San Miguel room, 401 2nd St NW Albuquerque, NM.

Wednesday, July 11th, 6-9 p.m. at the Roosevelt Middle School Cafeteria, 11799 State Highway 14S, Tijeras, NM.

Contact Nancy Brunswick at 505-346-3900 (voice), or cibolatravel@fs.fed.us for more info.