Steep work, great views

31 10 2015

Caution: Scenery- and work-project-heavy post ahead.

Thursday was the last day of work for the SCC crew – a short amount of time for a big – steep – job.

The day started with some clouds, cleared to sunshine, then returned to clouds. (More) Rain started Thursday night. (Have we been blessed by rain the last couple of weeks or what?!) So the crew had good conditions for their final day of work on Spring Creek Basin’s southeastern boundary fence.

Southwest Conservation Corps crew members build H-braces on a steep hill along Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary. From this vantage, one looks across the last drainage in the basin toward Disappointment Road.

Let’s start with a scenic overview. There we were, on the basin’s far southeastern boundary looking southwestish over the basin’s “last” drainage toward Disappointment Road, the cottonwoods along Disappointment Creek and to more pinon-juniper covered BLM land beyond the basin to San Juan National Forest Service land to the horizon. Note the two groups, both working on H-braces on the near ridge – aka “the steep hill.” If you click to make the photo larger, you may be able to see the silver fence at the left; that’s the part of the fence that the crew already had rebuilt. It runs into the fence rebuilt by Mizzou students (we left a section for the students to work on in the spring).

Southwest Conservation Corps members are replacing this fence along Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

Next, let’s take a look at the sad old fence that serves as an example of what the Mizzou students and the SCC crew have rebuilt and are rebuilding. We figure that fence has been around for 40 or more years.

Southwest Conservation Corps crew members Toby and Zoe finish an H-brace at the base of the steep hill to along Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

Toby and Zoe tighten another wire strand to a corner H-brace. Their rebuilt fence comes in from straight ahead, up from the arroyo shown in the previous post; the steep hill starts steps to the left.

Southwest Conservation Corps members Eric and Aaron dig a hole while building an H-brace on the steep hill on Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

Meanwhile, up the steep hill (hey, it really IS steep), Aaron and Eric dug holes for another H-brace. If you look closely, you can see the H-brace Toby and Zoe were working on below the hill at right.

Southwest Conservation Corps member Aaron watches Sarah carry an H-brace post up the steep hill on Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

Photographic proof of the steepness (in a two-dimensional photo, it’s hard to convey just how steep this hill is): Sarah carries a post up the hill to the site of the next H-brace.

Southwest Conservation Corps members Eric and Aaron check the cross post while building an H-brace on the steep hill on Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

This photo does double duty: Partners Eric and Aaron measure the setting of an H-brace post with the cross post, AND you get another dose of scenery.

Southwest Conservation Corps members Toby, Sarah and Abby take turns digging a hole for an H-brace post on the steep hill on Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

Toby and Sarah stand ready as Abby uses the post-hole digger to dig yet another hole for yet another H-brace on their journey to the top of the steep hill. Eric and Aaron in the photos above are below on the hill. The scenery here is part of McKenna Peak Wilderness Study Area – which overlaps into Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area; in this view, it’s all wilderness study area.

BLM range tech Justin Hunt helps dig a post hole for an H-brace on the steep hill with SCC crew members Toby and Abby on Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

Another view of the same H-brace site, this time with BLM range tech Justin Hunt helping to dig the second post hole. How steep is the hill? The H-brace Eric and Aaron are working on is 100 yards or less below this site – and completely out of view of this little knob in the hill.

The fence the Southwest Conservation Corps built. Up the hill in the foreground and across the small drainage in the lower background, beyond the photo, the crew left a section for the Mizzou students on alternative spring break next year.

From the side, here’s a view of Eric’s and Aaron’s H-brace. Abby and group are up the hill to the right. In the very first photo in this post, you can see both groups. Their rebuilt fence as it crosses the arroyo is very visible in this photo.

Southwest Conservation Corps members rebuild the fence up a steep hill on Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

Another gratuitous scenery shot – ain’t it grand?

Southwest Conservation Corps crew members Sarah, Aaron and Eric help co-crew leader Dillon complete an H-brace they built on a steep hill on Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

Returning to Eric’s and Aaron’s H-brace, now they have help from Sarah and co-crew leader Dillon to mark the first cross post. We had some debate about the levelness of these cross posts because the ground is so steep. Keeping the cross pieces strictly level would have had the post normal height on the downhill side of the brace but only about mid-thigh high on the uphill side! So crew members mirrored the slope a bit and cut their notches to reflect the angles of the posts’ ends.

Southwest Conservation Corps co-crew leader Dillon lends weight to the manual drill wielded by Eric as he drills a hole for a spike in the H-brace pictured. Aaron and Sarah, who dug the post holes, thread wire to anchor the braces on Spring Creek Basin's southeastern fence line.

It’s easy to ramble on about the partnerships we enjoy for the benefit of the basin’s mustangs, but here it is in living color: Dillon lends weight to Eric’s drill while he drills a hole in the H-brace into which he’ll later pound a spike. Ain’t it grand?! 🙂 Wrapping wires to create the “X” to further bind the brace posts together are Aaron and Sarah.

Southwest Conservation Corps crew member Sarah uses a chisel to create a notch for a cross bar in an H-brace in Spring Creek Basin's southeastern fence line.

Sarah chips out the notch that will hold the cross posts even steadier in the vertical H-brace posts.

In case the steepness of “the steep hill” hasn’t been mentioned or illustrated clearly, these next photos should do the trick:

Southwest Conservation Corps co-crew leader Sarah carries a post up the steep hill to build an H-brace in Spring Creek Basin's southeastern fence line. All smiles on Day 4!

Co-crew leader Sarah carries an H-brace post up the steep hill. She’s passing the first H-brace, and she’ll pass the next H-brace before getting to her destination – and they had at least one more H-brace to build after that. Still all-smiles on Day 4!

BLM range tech Justin Hunt carries a post up the steep hill behind SCC co-crew leader Sarah on the way to build a new H-brace above the one pictured, with co-crew leader Dillon, on Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary.

Justin follows Sarah on the way to the second H-brace up the steep hill, where Dillon is making cuts to start the notching process.

Southwest Conservation Corps crew member Zoe carries a post up the steep hill to use as part of an H-brace along Spring Creek Basin's southeastern fence line.

And here’s Zoe carrying another post from basically the base of the steep hill (scroll back up to the beginning of this post and the H-brace where she and Toby were tightening a strand of wire).

Southwest Conservation Corps crew members construct H-braces in the new fence along Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary. That steep hill is why they were hired!

From the bottom looking up.

Southwest Conservation Corps crew members construct a new fence along Spring Creek Basin's southeastern boundary. That steep hill is why they were hired!

And from down toward the arroyo looking up at the steep hill. Um, wowowow?! The wilderness study area’s namesake McKenna Peak shows its point at far right.

Sarah, Dillon, Eric, Aaron, Sarah, Zoe, Abby and Toby, we thank you, thank you, thank you for your service on behalf of our mustangs! We hope your last hitch of the season was your best. Thankfully, you saw some mustangs along the way between camp site and work site, and if you can, please come back soon to see more of the mustangs protected and kept safe by your work!

Beyond Spring Creek Basin in McKenna Peak Wilderness Study Area: McKenna Peak at far left and Temple Butte toward the right. Outside Spring Creek Basin, they are two of the basin's most recognizable landmarks.

View from the top. 🙂





Coming to water

15 10 2015

Comng to water.

Mustangs from different bands form a line to water – a still-nicely-filled pond in the middle of Spring Creek Basin. Two of the basin’s icons – McKenna Peak and Temple Butte – fill the horizon and frame the magic.

Summer monsoons didn’t materialize here in the southwestern corner of the state, and we’re looking for autumn rains somewhere in all these blue, blue, cloudless skies. Fortunately, some raindrops have returned to our forecast. Crossing fingers and hooves.





Skyline

4 10 2015

Chrome, Temple Butte, McKenna Peak

The incomparable Chrome perfects the iconic Spring Creek Basin landscape that includes McKenna Peak and Temple Butte.





Partners for mustangs

3 10 2015

Wednesday, I partnered with folks from BLM, the Forest Service, San Juan Mountains Association and Southwest Conservation Corps to haul fence materials into Spring Creek Basin. Long-time readers of this blog are familiar with the outstanding alternative spring break program that brings a group of enthusiastic University of Missouri students to Southwest Colorado each year (look under the March links in the blog roll). In addition to working in Spring Creek Basin, students work on other areas of San Juan public lands for a week before heading back to class in Columbia, Mo. After four years, students have rebuilt quite a long stretch of our southeastern boundary fence – carrying materials in by manual labor because of its location in McKenna Peak Wilderness Study Area (no motor vehicles allowed).

Now that we’re pretty far in, and a steep bit of shale hill is coming up (literally), SJMA’s Kathe Hayes and BLM’s range specialist/herd manager Mike Jensen got the attention of the SCC (based in Durango) to give us a hand. While we want to give the Mizzou students a spring break they won’t soon forget, we don’t want to get too crazy. 🙂 Next spring, they’ll continue to rebuild fence from where the last group left off this past spring toward the base of the hill. This fall, the SCC crew will leapfrog where this spring’s students finished to start rebuilding a section from close to the base of the hill UP the hill.

To ease the workload of both crews, our little group hauled fence supplies this week: wooden posts (for H-braces), T-posts (to replace worn/bent/warped ones), lots and lots of staves (to stabilize the wires between T-posts), and rolls of smooth-twisted and barbed wire (to create wild-horse/life-friendly fencing that cattle won’t want to mess with from the outside) – to a site convenient for both the SCC crew this fall and Mizzou students in the spring.

Many, many thanks to BLM’s Mike Jensen, Justin Hunt and Garth Nelson, SJMA’s Kathe Hayes, the Forest Service’s Harold Park, SCC’s Jordan and BLM/SCC’s Lauren for providing the human labor (including hours of scheduling and logistics!).

Huge, huge thanks to our four-legged crew: Traveler (who packed posts), Trapper (who packed staves and T-posts), Pinch (who packed wire and spikes and Lauren :)) and Zip (who packed staves), as well as Jammer (who packed Harold) and Sneakers (who packed Kathe). These seasoned Forest Service veterans made our job much easier – and they worked for apples!*

BLM range tech Justin Hunt leads Forest Service pack horse Trapper with a load of T-posts while Lauren leads Pinch toward the dropoff point along the southeastern boundary fence of Spring Creek Basin Herd Management Area. A Southwest Conservation Corps crew will be in the basin in October to replace a steep section of the fence, which has been worked on for four years by University of Missouri students during alternative spring break.

Here’s a teaser pic of Justin leading Trapper after Lauren and Pinch on the way to the cache site, following Kathe and Harold, who led the other two pack horses. For more pix of a great day of work that benefits Spring Creek Basin’s beloved mustangs, check out SJMA’s photostream on Flicker.

* Jammer and Pinch are Harold’s personal horses, and Sneakers belongs to Kathe.





Merry Christmas

25 12 2014

Gaia and Cassidy Rain, McKenna Peak and Temple Butte

Take Time to See

It seems so hard to understand.
As I look out across the land
That all I view belongs to me.
I ought to take more time to see!

The distant hills and mountains high
The rolling clouds and bright blue sky.
No one can take these views from me
As long as I have eyes to see.

A timid deer with haunting look
Who stands refreshed by yonder brook
Knows not that he belongs to me.
Oh, what a thrilling sight to see!

The song of birds so gay and clear
That fill the morning air with cheer.
And fragrant flowers of every hue
That stand erect bedecked with dew.
All these and more belong to me
If I but use my eyes to see.

When evening shadows gather nigh
And twinkling stars light up the sky
I hear my master say to me
“I made it all for you to see.”
My heart grows warm with faith and pride
To know that he is by my side.

~ Ray F. Zaner

*********

This poem is printed in the Leanin’ Tree Christmas card sent to me from my parents, and it so perfectly captures the love we feel for America’s wild horses and burros that I wanted to share it with all of you on this special day.

Very merry Christmas to each of you. Thank you for all the ways in which you support mustangs and burros.

May the magic of wild creatures and wild places bless you every single day.





Storm chaser

23 12 2014

Storm, McKenna Peak and Temple Butte

Have you seen too much McKenna Peak and Temple Butte? Good! Storm and his band had the best view in the house the evening of winter solstice.

Well, that’s arguable; I’m pretty sure that with Storm and his band in the foreground, I’m the one with the very best view (even if all the snow is far away).





Their world

20 12 2014

1511 Chrome, McKenna Peak and Temple Butte

Such intelligence, curiosity, alertness – presence – and present in the world, his world.

Chrome is backed by McKenna Peak and Temple Butte – icons of Spring Creek Basin. The snow looks great in the background, but the foreground was pretty bare of snow. However, the ground was damp, and that’s always a good thing.

**********

Happy birthday, Kat!





White stuff – great stuff

15 12 2014

Temple Butte in snow

Sunday snow on Temple Butte.

McKenna Peak

McKenna Peak.

Isn’t the snow lovely? And it’s good moisture that seeped quickly into the thirsty soil.





All lined up

8 12 2014

Tenaz, McKenna Peak, Temple Butte

Tenaz was so comfortable and drowsy in the afternoon sunshine that he never moved while I worked to align his handsome self with McKenna Peak and Temple Butte.

It’s a weird December so far – warm and dry, though we did get a tiny bit of rain last week. Snow would be extremely welcome!





Classic

29 05 2014

Bounce, McKenna Peak

Mr. Bounce against the backdrop of iconic McKenna Peak, namesake of McKenna Peak Wilderness Study Area, which overlaps Spring Creek Basin’s southeastern and eastern edges.