The Continuing Story of the Forbidden Dance

When we left the lek—the grouse were dancing joyfully and then a beautiful predator crashed the party. The dancers were hunkered down awaiting their fate. Party guests were tense watching to learn if a dancer would die……

Female Harrier flying over and checking out male Greater Sage Grouse on lek in NW Colorado. By Todd Patrick

The beautiful yet menacing hawk stretched her wings wide, tilting them to slow her flight, seeming to hover a foot from the ground. She flexed her sharp talons, brushing her lethal weapons lightly through the feathers of the largest male grouse teasing him with her power, strength and beauty.

Hawk & Grouse by Todd Patrick

The grouse seemed to shudder or was that just the breeze in his full coat of feathers?

Then, seeing nothing she wished to take, the hawk lifted her wings and soared fast and true through the big bright blue sky.

A sigh went up from the crowd. The grouse couples arose with new life and commenced to shake their tail feathers as if in triumph. Yet, the moment of peace was brief as in one corner of the dance “floor” a scuffle ensued.

Two males drunk on survival, squared off, eying each other like prize fighters. They circled one another looking for weakness. Ducking and weaving, jabbing, with a right hook here and faint there.

Male Grouse Face-Off at the Lek By Todd Patrick

The tension mounted as the insults began to fly back and forth between the two cocky birds. Such fights often ended in blood-shed. Would the grouse survive the hawk only to be lethally injured in a dance room brawl?

Male Grouse Circling before a Fight. By Todd Patrick

Find out in the final installment of….The Forbidden Dance….

“The Forbidden Dance” is an extended metaphor with blatantly anthropomorphic perspectives of some of the events experienced during the 2012 Grouse Viewing Trips as recounted by CEC’s Northwest Organizer, head grouse wrangler, and abuser of metaphors Sasha Nelson. Her professors are seriously considering confiscation of her advanced degree in animal behavior and her colleague biologists at Rocky Mountain Wild are threatening to never speak to her again. In her defense Sasha states: “I was so sleep deprived I think I was channeling my Nature Writing in the West professor who used to say – a message doesn’t have to be scientifically accurate to be understood.”

Learn more about Greater Sage Grouse and CEC’s work in Northwest Colorado by visiting us!

Better Than TV!

There is nothing like experiencing first hand something you would watch on Discovery or the National Geographic Channel. Here I am, well before sunrise, driving westward in anticipation of watching the Greater Sage Grouse perform their mating dance. I arrive in Craig to meet up with the other Northwestern folks joining in on this training trip. Everyone looks pretty groggy as Sasha gives a preliminary chat about what our day will entail and what to expect once we are on the “lek”. All the necessary forms are filled out and last minute details finalized, everyone loads up into the vehicles, and we begin the journey continuing west until we near the Wyoming border.

There they were with their tail feathers high and fanned out, the tips of their wings scrapping the ground and their air-sacks expanding as they proudly danced and displayed their manliness. It did not take long before the ladies arrived to check out the gentlemen who were looking for that special someone. There were three ladies that came for the show and left, as far as we could tell, satisfied. They were off to feed and soon lay an egg. After a few hours the show was over and everyone that came for the viewing was as satisfied as the Greater Sage Grouse ladies. It was a sight to see and one I, and the rest of the group, will not soon forget.

What happened to the grouse dancers?

Too find out read the next installment of “The Forbidden Dance” later this week or a few seats are still available, join us  for a “dance” experience  you will remember always!

 

Party crasher at our dance!

Male grouse compete for female attention at the "dance"

It was a breezy, but beautiful morning in Northwest Colorado. The grouse were dancing in full display. The sun had just come-up and the light was perfect for photographers taking happy snaps of the happy grouse couples on the dance “floor” when out of the clear blue sky a bold and beautiful party crasher swooped in. A russet colored female Harrier Hawk coming in low, fighting the wind, inches from the top of the crested wheat grass stubble.  The music stopped the dancers too and a hush fell over the crowd. In she swooped, brazen as, well as brazen as a hawk on the hunt.  The tension built as the invited grouse guests hunkered down. Would we see blood-shed on this bright and beautiful morning? Would the dancing end as the frightened guests scattered?

Want to know what happens next? Check back to read the next part of the forbidden dance OR come join us and see the “dance” for yourself. 

CEC, Colorado Parks and Wildlife, The Wilderness Society and our partners invite you to the “Dance”. We are pleased to offer limited seating trips to see the iconic Greater Sage Grouse mating dance.  To learn more about the tours or to purchase your ticket, click here. 

Weighing in on the governor’s ads

Over the last few days you might have heard or seen an ad that Gov. Hicklooper did with the oil and gas industry.  In the ads he says, “we have not had one instance of groundwater contamination associated with drilling and hydraulic fracturing.”  Since 2008 we’ve had dozens and dozens of spills of toxic chemicals from oil and gas activity. Studies done by the State of Colorado show numerous instances of accidental discharges, corroded tanks and pipelines, and leaking containment pits have put toxic fluids in our groundwater, including carcinogenic hydrocarbons such as benzene.  “It’s simply inaccurate to state that oil and gas drilling isn’t contaminating ground water in Colorado,” said Mike Freeman, CEC board member. ”The state’s own records show that spills and releases routinely affect ground water.  

CEC and many of our partners have worked hand in hand with the Hickenlooper administration to find compromise solutions that protect Colorado’s environment. Yesterday, CEC and our partners sent the following letter to Governor Hickenlooper. We hope he takes our message to heart and presents a more balanced voice on oil and gas issues in Colorado. Read more news coverage of the recent ad and our concerns here and here

February 27, 2012

 

Dear Gov. Hickenlooper,

 

Your administration played a critical role last year in creating one of the nation’s strongest fracking disclosure rules. It was your goal of keeping Colorado citizens informed about fracking and your leadership in overseeing negotiations that got us across the finish line, delivering a big win for citizens and communities that have demanded the right to know what fracking chemicals are going into the ground.

That’s why we were so surprised and disappointed to hear your recent radio ad on behalf of the Colorado Oil and Gas Association, an industry trade group. The ad rightly recognizes Colorado’s success in adopting protective rules in 2008 and 2011, but it creates a misleading picture about the overall safety of oil and gas development. Specifically, the ad claims that since 2008, “we have not had one instance of groundwater contamination associated with drilling and hydraulic fracturing.”
That assertion misleads the public by ignoring the high incidence of groundwater contamination from spills and releases of toxic chemicals at or near drilling sites. Since 2008, numerous instances of groundwater contamination have resulted from releases of chemicals such as petroleum liquids and produced water used and generated during drilling and hydraulic fracturing.  Accidental spills, corroded tanks and pipelines, and leaking containment pits have been implicated in numerous releases of toxic fluids, including carcinogenic hydrocarbons such as benzene. The Colorado oil and gas commission’s October 2011 “Spills and Releases” report and its 2011 report  to CDPHE, issued earlier this month, make clear that contamination of groundwater remains an ongoing issue with oil and gas development.  Similarly, a Denver Post analysis of state records for 2011 found 58 cases of groundwater pollution linked to spills and releases.  Another Denver Post analysis of accidental spills dating back to 2008 found an even larger number of groundwater incidents.

The COGA ad leaves Coloradans with an inaccurate picture of the consequences of oil and gas drilling operations. While citizens should know how much progress we have made in adopting health and safety protections, they should also feel confident that the state recognizes and is working to minimize the inevitable impacts of oil and gas development.  A good first step toward building that confidence is to withdraw the COGA ad and to direct the oil and gas commission to adopt new and stronger protections for Colorado’s water resources and communities, including increased mandatory setbacks of oil and gas wells from rivers and streams, and from homes.  No doubt we can all agree that it’s vital to give Colorado citizens both an accurate picture of oil and gas development and the confidence that we are all working aggressively to mitigate its impacts.

Respectfully,

 

Clean Water Action
Checks and Balances
Colorado Conservation Voters
Colorado Environmental Coalition
Earthjustice
Environment Colorado
High Country Citizens Alliance
National Wildlife Federation
RouttCountyFrack.Org
Sierra Club, Roaring Fork Chapter
San Juan Citizens Alliance
Western Colorado Congress
Wilderness Workshop

A friend in need

Getting ready to get airborne. (Anne Pogoriler)

There are only a few things I will get up before the crack of dawn for and they are as follows: fresh powder on the mountain, leaving for vacation, and a family member or friend in need. On November 1st I woke up at 5:45am in order view via air and ground what exactly is happening on BLM land on the Roan Plateau with ongoing oil shale research and development projects. Because I love nature so much I consider this an example of family member/friend in need.

I had never been on a small plane before so, I was a bit anxious about how I might handle it. Traveling from Grand Junction where we had stayed the night before, by 8 am we reach the Rifle Regional Air Field to meet Bruce Gordon, our air guide. Bruce is the President of EcoFlight, a tour company that offers flights to provide first hand overviews of our country to better understand and encourage protection of the remaining wildlands & roadless areas of America. Learning more about Bruce, my fears of my first flight on a small plane began to ebb a little.

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Red tape or red herring?

Originally published in Sunday’s Craig Daily Press:

In what seems to be an annual occurrence like the Perseid meteor shower, optimism on the upcoming Broncos season, and lamenting the impending school year, so goes the usual cries of eliminating regulations and cutting red tape under the auspices of fostering development of our natural resources.

This year’s initial summer volley into the area of anti-regulation came from Congressman Kevin McCarthy, the House Majority Whip from California, and Senator John Barrasso, of Wyoming.

In two complementary bills that have been dubbed “The Great Outdoors Giveaway,” McCarthy and Barrasso have proposed legislation that would have the Bureau of Land Management release more than six million acres of Wilderness Study Area from protection and lift protection from some 36 million acres of U.S. Forest Service lands.

Here in Colorado, that means roughly four million acres of the state’s most iconic and wild places would be stripped of protections under the guise of economic stimulation.

“The Wilderness and Roadless Area Release Act would help create jobs and grow local economies across the United States,” McCarthy said.

I won’t profess to know what the economy of Bakersfield, Calif. (McCarthy’s home) is based upon, but he evidently hasn’t bothered to understand how some Western economies work.

In places like Moffat County, where more than $30 million comes into our economy from hunting and wildlife, Roadless Areas and Wilderness Study Areas are integral to creating healthy herds and growing trophy animals.

Because of that fact, just recently the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation retracted its support of the bill.

“RMEF cannot endorse the bill because of its potential negative impacts to roadless areas,” the organization stated.

Much of anti-conservation rhetoric can be tied back to the mineral leasing reforms instituted by the Department of Interior in 2010. These common-sense reforms focused on fostering greater public involvement in the mineral leasing process by informing landowners when the minerals under their land were slated for lease and providing more adequate time for the public to comment on proposed leasing decisions.

The other intention of the reforms was to limit the amount of legal protests made on proposed leases by addressing issues at an earlier stage in the process. Sure enough, from January to July this year, BLM reported that just 8 percent of the parcels offered were protested.

The fact is that in the first quarter of 2011, Colorado produced 357 billion cubic feet of natural gas, which was more produced than even at the height of the most recent boom in 2008.

When looked at nationally, the oil and gas industry added 17,200 new oilfield jobs, according to Bureau of Labor Standards. Individual companies have been reporting huge profits and increased production.

Haliburton reported it had doubled profits during the second quarter in comparison to the year previous. Baker-Hughes, Inc. doubled its North American income to $440 million, from the second quarter compared to the same time in 2010, and has added 2,200 jobs in the last 12 months.

Just as was said when Colorado passed new oil and gas regulations in 2007, the industry will survive and thrive despite new regulations that engage the public and protect our quality of life.

Even our own Congressman Scott Tipton has jumped on the bandwagon, announcing that he and Rep. Doug Lamborn will be hosting an oversight hearing of the House Subcommittee of Energy and Mineral Resources next week in Grand Junction.

Rep. Tipton stated in a news release for the hearing, “Through this hearing, I hope to shed light on some of the opportunities we have to jump start responsible production of our oil shale reserves, and find solutions to spur on job creation in Colorado and across the nation.”

However, since the Congressman has entitled his hearing as “American Jobs and Energy Security: Domestic Oil Shale the Status of Research, Regulation and Roadblocks,” it sure seems as if he has already made up his mind on what the supposed solutions are to the problem he perceives.

The fact that anyone believes that a regulatory framework is the obstacle to commercial oil shale production is a sign their head is planted firmly in the sand.

Oil shale development proponents such as Shell Oil have routinely stated they are a decade or more away from commercial oil production.

There are currently tens of thousands of acres of public land (and even more private land) currently available to companies for research and development, so access isn’t the issue.

The fact is we have been attempting to squeeze oil out of a rock in an economically, environmentally and socially responsible manner for decades in this country.

Regulations haven’t been the obstacle. Rather, it has been the reality that no one has figured it out yet.

Some day we may see a robust oil shale commercial development in Northwest Colorado, but mortgaging our natural heritage for the hope of a big payoff down the road isn’t a sound investment strategy. There is nothing to be ashamed of by taking a careful and cautious approach to a form of development that has such a checkered past.

Everyone can agree that unnecessary impediments to job creation should be removed. However, bedrock environmental laws that protect our quality of life and are a crucial component to our custom and culture should not be the focal point by partisans.

Instead of attacking the problems to job growth and creation such as reasonable access to credit, affordable health care, a simplified tax code, etc., some legislators have decided that ideology will be their guiding light and they will only act in expedient fashion when it comes to issues of re-election.

We need real solutions to real problems, and what is being provided by some of our elected officials is nothing more than a red herring.

 

Sierra Club + GASLAND the movie

  

                               

Sierra Club is promoting the (Oscar nominated) film GASLAND by encouraging activists to host or attend house party screenings. If you have yet to see the film, please consider attending a house party or hosting one. Please spread the word to others who might be interested in seeing this film. Now is the time to see it, before GASLAND 2 comes to a screening near you. Josh Fox is working on the sequel now.

Independence Day for Vermillion Basin!


Some of the Friends of Northwest Colorado raise a toast to BLM & Vermillion

Citizens celebrate the bold announcement by BLM to remove 77,000 acres of Vermillion Basin, Northwest Colorado from mineral leasing when they release their final resource management plan later this summer.

Visit the new SaveVermillion.org website and watch the video to learn more about Vermillion – one of the last wild places.

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