SocraticGadfly: Big Bend National Park
Showing posts with label Big Bend National Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Bend National Park. Show all posts

August 27, 2024

Capitalism for Capitol Reef! Big Pharma for Big Bend!

Author photo, Santa Elena Canyon, Big Bend National Park

What could go wrong with this? 

At r/NationalPark, it was noted that the Lilly Endowment is giving $100 million to the National Park Service's charity, the National Park Foundation.

As I said?

Yep, our suck-ass American health care system is going to try to fix our ailing national parks!

Besides the parent company ripping Americans off on medications? The endowment is big on religion-related donations. And, per one comment at that subreddit, has also contributed to climate denialists, the Hudson Institute and the Federalist Society.

Plus, a gift this size, one-tenth of the foundation's entire fund drive, could lead to general big-swinging-dick-itis.

And, the National Parks Foundation, while started with the best of purposes, has itself become more and more neoliberalized. Its partnership with the NPS on that organization's centennial, courtesy of Dear Leader and his private-sector Interior boss, Sally Jewell, was proof positive of that. And, related to this story, insurance giant Humana was part of that. (And, beyond that story, before running REI, Jewell had a "dirty" background including time at eXXXon, or, to be precise, pre-merger Mobil, which is bad enough. She was also a "drill, baby, drill" person. No wonder she was "drill, baby, drill" — had old bosses to satisfy.

Celebrate 100 years in the national parks! Don't injure yourself if you can't afford one of our insurance plans, or one of our opioid medications.

And, don't forget to tip jar the whores at places like NPCA, the National Parks Conservation Association. Per that link, they're sellouts as well as whores for touting national recreation areas that violate NPS' Organic Act.

August 20, 2024

Getting Texas environmental news wrong again

Seriously, the Monthly needs to have an outside person vet most its environmental news stories.

Contra the Monthly, black bears have never really been "gone" from West Texas. I've seen two at Big Bend, heard reports of a third siting, and heard one in the Guadalupe Mountains. It's the Monthly. Beyond West Texas, I've seen Parks and Wildlife's reports that more are moving into NE Texas from Oklahoma's Kiamichis. Texas' lack of public land compounds all this. You won't see that in the Monthly, either. 

Meanwhile, who with a brain would pay for this shit?

As long as the Monthly's paywall is a Javascript fake that still lets me read the story, just not click the links, I'll keep reading for free. When it becomes a real paywall, I'll stop reading. As I did with the article on Lone Star Beer, as there, the Javascript covered the screen, including my right-hand slider.

May 02, 2023

Big Bend getting big revamp; generally good, more needed

The following is from Strategic Government Partners, based on a National Park Service news release.

(All photos in this piece and linked blog posts are mine.)

Big Bend National Park is often referred to as “Texas’ Gift to the Nation.” Area leaders believe the infrastructure of the park needs immediate attention. That work will begin soon, thanks to $22 million from the Great American Outdoors Act. Work will start with the replacement of Chisos Mountain Lodge. The facility has a shifting foundation and numerous cracks in the floors and walls.

The lodge, built in 1965, houses a restaurant, gift shop, check-in counter and administrative offices. A convenience store, currently next to the Visitor’s Center, will be demolished and a similar shop will be integrated into the new building. The potable water systems will also be replaced, which will require reconstruction of the grounds and several roads.

Renderings depict a glass, two-story building. It will be fire resistant, to be less susceptible to wildfires, and energy efficient, with solar panels, dark sky–friendly lighting, and a smart water-usage plan. An outdoor patio and seating area will move from the first floor to the second to keep visitors and wildlife at a safe distance. 

Work is also being done to find a solution to a growing trash problem. Big Bend is one of two national parks with an on-site landfill which is almost at full capacity. Alternatives could include a transfer station or landfill outside the park that could be privately owned. 

More here on the need, with a video at the link, from the Park Service. Discussion of the proposed new lodge dining and more starts at about the 20 minute mark on the video. Before that, you'll see how bad of shape parts of the kitchen area, especially, are currently in. The upgrade has been under discussion for a couple of years.

I told SGI that I hope the fantastic plate-glass picture windows view from the current restaurant will not be changed, and that appears to be the case. In fact, it looks like views will be improved in other directions beyond the Window, on the second floor, and yes, it's going to be a two-floor deal. Specifics of layout start at about the 28-minute mark, with the preferred alternative starting at about the 31-minute mark. Getting solar panels in is part of the design. 

Casa Grande, pictured at sunset, would be visible from the east end of the new dining room.

That said, the park needs to expand either the Cottonwood or Rio Grande Village campground, or maybe add another, not necessarily big one, elsewhere. It could be primitive. Expand Hannold Draw, which is relatively easily car-accessible, into 10-12 spots, for example. No water, and a biffy instead of flush toilets. Croton Spring could probably also be expanded. (In exchange for that, charging for primitive camping would, if not eliminated, have its price reduced; I've not been to BB since 2019, when it announced, but before it launched, such charging, on a per-day basis, discussed here. Fees are currently $10 a day.)

The park is set to get a small expansion, including parts of Terlingua Creek, on the west side. It also added a new trail north of Panther Junction. Click that link to set a sample of what's involved with creating a new trail in a Park Service unit, particularly when it's in officially designated wilderness. As the Austin area becomes more and more Californicated, Big Bend traffic will only pick up. From 2016-21, in part, yes, due to COVID, visitation increased 50 percent.

==

Per previous blogging, from many previous visits?

Big Bend also needs more light pollution protection on both sides of the river but does NOT need more cellphone towers. It also needs massive federal wilderness designation, per that post, if it's not yet been granted.

BB needs road improvements (and better Millennial visitors). Of course, the former problem is Park Service-wide. I think the latter is becoming more and more that way.

BB's nature? Don't change it.

April 01, 2022

Big Bend to get wilderness protection?


I totally support the idea of getting federal wilderness protection for a big chunk of Big Bend National Park, but that's not the only thing that needs addressing.

There's light pollution from increased gas flaring at the southern end of the Permian leading into the park. The last time I was there was Christmas 2019, and it was ridiculous. Wayne Christian (or Wayne-o NOT) at the Railroad Commission says his org is cutting the problem, but, yeah, sure. 

Also, based on my most recent previous visit, there's the risk of increased light pollution across the river at Boquillas (no, really) with reliable regular electricity and night lighting. Big Bend itself, as well as Big Bend Ranch State Park, have International Dark Sky designation, but none of the Mexican preserves across the river do.

Why Congress never adopted the original 1978 NPS recommendation within the park, that said, I don't know. Actually, per the story and my own knowledge of NPS, I do know. It was apparently just a pro forma ask that NPS never pushed further.

At Olympic, as I noted last year, the Park Service, and not just local staff, opposed wilderness designation for much of that park. (Fortunately, creosote bushes aren't eyeballed for commercial logging.) Meanwhile, when we do get wilderness designation, the NPS wants to de-wild it as much as possible. That's why Carsten Lien, the author of the book about Olympic's woes that was behind the first link, wanted a "U.S. Wilderness Service" to be formed — the NPS was too much of a sellout. And, per that second link, we don't need more cellphone towers being built in designated wilderness areas.

And, seeing the expansion of cellphone towers in national parks, and other things, "pristineness," more than "just" wilderness, is what's needed. Beyond wilderness, we also, as part of pristineness, need to cut way back on the whole issue of corporate sponsors of and partners with the NPS.

January 13, 2022

Texas Progressives talk Cancun Ted, Beto-Bob the politician, Shelley Luther

Off the Kuff presented the primary campaign interviews it has conducted so far.

SocraticGadfly offers some thoughts on Karl Rove, election thuggery and election theft in the wake of Rove's Jan. 6 column.

Shelley Luther is continuing to look for political relevance after getting squashed by Drew Springer a year ago. (With the money and notoriety she has, surprised she didn't take a gander at a state House seat, or even primarying Michael Burgess for the U.S. House with redistricting.) Her latest? Calling for a ban on Chinese university students. That said, yeah, some of them may indeed have CCP connections, and two-party duopolists may not look at the issue with more depth.

Van Taylor is getting bigly primaried for supporting an independent commission to investigate Jan. 6, even though he later opposed the House commission. (Remember, this was one of those ersatz "filibusters" by Senate Rethugs.)

What does "progressive" actually mean in Texas politics, at least in Congressional candidates? The Express-News takes a look.

Gus Bova takes the latest state news sites look at R.F. O'Rourke. He indicated that Beto is at risk of becoming Just.Another.Politician.™ Got news for you, Gus. Beto was long there. Like in 2018. Bova does note that after his "take your guns" screed, he then was part of the Texas Democratic Mafia that cock-blocked Bernie Sanders. So, say that he hit a more thorough version of JAP (a prince, or princess version, I see what I did) in 2020. Meanwhile, at the Dallas Observer, Simone Carter goes full bromance on R.F.

For the unknowing, after actually saying something halfway close to the truth about the Jan. 6 insurrection, Ted Cruz then went on Cucker Tarlson, I mean Socialist Swanson Tucker Carlson, and proceeded to cut his balls off and put them on a plate for Tucker. Per that link, Cancun Ted has actually said things 25 percent of the way to the truth about Jan. 6 for months, even while refusing to admit that his vote not to certify electoral votes contributed to the problem. He should have known Swanson Tucker was going to do just what he did, which means Carlson is wrong about one thing — Havana Ted ain't so smart.

Nature vandalism is getting worse at Big Bend, as at other NPS and general nature sites.

Michael Li explains why the discourse about how Democrats have "won" redistricting misses a lot of the picture.

Glasstire eulogizes Ann Harithas, artist and curator and co-founder of the Art Car Museum.

Rick Casey predicts the future following the ongoing 2020 election fraudit.

National

Just when you think Texas election law is hard for third party ballot access, Georgia says hold my beer.

Michael Lind writes about the strange career of Paul Krugman. (And does so without irony, though possibly with some hypocrisy, given Michael Lind's own peregrinations within a tight box generally focused on left-neoliberalism, as in, yes, left, but still within neoliberalism.) Interestingly, per the next piece, Lind notes that Krugman went on to call Stephen Jay Gould an academic fraud.

Sociobiology, like its successor, ev psych, IS sexist, but it's hard to argue that it's racist. So, I would agree with this guy that calling the late E.O. Wilson racist, AND doing so after his death, AND doing so in a Sokol fashion, was a hit job. Who did that? Per Peter Burns, none other than Scientific American. (OTOH, Burns is wrong in thinking Wilson is Mr. Innocent. Sociobiology, and even more its successor, ev psych, was and is sexist. And, both were/are more pseudoscientific than scientific.) Per the graf above, Gould was one of the first to call out sociobiology.

The Nation has a fatuous mini op-ed on climate change, talking about how expensive it will be but NO actual discussion of the details, Tweeted with an even more fatuous hot take about how this is all Republicans' fault when Status Quo Joe has allowed new gummint drilling leases and Dear Leader publicly pushed his "all of the above." And, that's why, after years of 10 cents on the dollar starter subscription offers for the mag, I've continued to refuse.

January 10, 2020

Are the Millennials ruining Big Bend?


Big Bend is a beautiful place and relatively underexplored, though visitor numbers have generally been growing.

So, what's up with my Millennials dig? Let's ... dig in.

Not all of them, surely. Some of them? Quite possibly.

Two qualifiers, one on Millennials and another on my Big Bend background.

First, I don't think all Millennials are avocado toast touters. Related? I think the continued growth of income inequality has hit Millennials big-time, and that that gap probably tracks race still to some degree, even as Millennials are the most ethnically diverse generational grouping in American history.

So, are white Millennials who don't live in their parents' basement likely to live up to enough of what some might call a stereotype for me to call it a generalization, instead? I say yes, with the note that, as elsewhere in this blog, more than 50 percent true = generalization and less than that = stereotype. YMMV.

Second, me in Big Bend?

First trip was there in 2001. I was there before some asshat in Washington, D.C., decided that Osama bin Laden might invade the US through Boquillas, Mexico, and therefore, we needed to prevent some viejo from there rowing to Merika, rowing visitors across for $5 a pop, putting them on his donkey while wearing his serape and sombrero at $5 a pop or whatever for photos, then pointing them off to the village for northern Mexican food not that different than Tex-Mex. (Give me real New Mexico Mexican food instead, still.)

From 2001-2010, I was there all but two years on Thanksgiving weekend or within a week or two of that. Did one spring visit as well, and a 2011 visit. Got a bit burned out in 2010 after bad placement of my tent at K-Bar primitive and a rare late fall rain got water inside my tent, over my ground cloth.

Family of origin holiday invited, and a move to Deep East Texas, interrupted further visits.

Until this year.

Anyway, I had become a regular, and been a regular long enough to be a veteran.

Besides the scenery itself, one of the great things about Big Bend is having a 104-degree hot spring, and right next to the river to boot. Just hot enough for great late fall or early winter nighttime soaks after a long day of hiking. Fair amount of sulfur, but not enough to stink. I believe a moderate amount of magnesium, surely some of it in magnesium sulfate, or good old Epsom salts, and bits of other minerals.

You either hike about three-quarters a mile from a parking area to see the general store and other things that were there pre-national park days, or about 1.5 miles from the one campground.

Rookies (or others, as I'll note in a minute) shine their flashlights too much when they get to the springs getting ready to get in.

Anyway, at the spring, and a bit after dark at the general store at Chisos Basin, is where I learned from people who were veterans when I was a rookie about good hiking trails, when to go on them, what to look for, etc., then sharing hiking talk.

SO ...

Now we're set up for #OKMillennial.

Well, not quite.

NPS rules are two at the spring:
1. No booze;
2. No getting nekkid.

I think it was the second night of my first visit when I saw a crowd from Hippie Hollow just get nekkid and jump in.

After that, from time to time, if it was earlier in the evening, veterans would ask "what's the clothing situation" or something like that. If I see older couples, or kids of any age, I keep the swim trunks on.

I think once I had to actually do that from 2004 on.

NOW we're set up for #OKMillennial.

In totality on both the night of Saturday/21st and Sunday/22nd, there were about a dozen others in the spring. About what I remember years ago from Thanksgiving time. (The first spring I was out there, I only soaked one night; it was too warm outside, and the second day was worse. Turns out, as I found out after going over to Big Bend Ranch State Park the next day and seeing 100 on a Presidio bank thermometer, it was WAY too warm.)

Anyway, not one of the Millennials even thought to get nekkid. Most of the women, by what I could see by flashlight, had things like 1950s swim outerwear, filmy swim bathrobes or something like that over their actual swimsuits.

Whether they just don't know to think better, are that prudish, are that non-prudishly self-conscious or what, I don't know.

I suspect mainly the third. In that case, stop looking at Instagram Influencers whose body pix have been Photoshopped. If it's the first? Step outside the box. If it's the second, stop being prudish.

OK, now, something like avocado toast. Saturday, one Millennial couple brought a campsite propane tank with screw-on burner and pour-over coffee setup. I've brought coffee down before, but I made it at either my campsite or something like the Chisos basin if I had my Coleman stove with me. The coffee doesn't "decay" that much in half an hour of extra time. Plus, they brought, for themselves and friends who later showed up, four-five boxes of what must have been things like Christmas crackers and cookies, probably the type of stuff you get at World Market.

Anyway, within their group, NOBODY talked trail hiking. Maybe I should have intervened a bit, but ... I was semi-disgusted.

The second night's group did talk a bit about their day's events. So did a hippie from Oregon dumb enough to have pot in his car while driving through Texas and getting pulled over for allegedly weaving too much. (Conditions of his bail, of course, include staying in Texas until his trial or other case disposition.)

This was the first time I'd been at Christmas. Maybe old veterans, whether or not Hippie Hollow people, hit the springs at Thanksgiving still.

And doorknob help some of these people if they hit some of Big Bend's challenges. (Never seen a rattler myself, fortunately. Taken a brief stroll toward Anguilla Mesa but didn't push anything. I actually have taken a car on the Pine Canyon road to the trailhead, but per my "veteran" status, that was more than a decade ago; the road might be worse today. Others are. I have not camped at Terlingua Abajo, but one year, wound up camping at a tent/RV site behind the semi-campy restaurant in Terlingua, yes.

For Anguilla, and Bruja Canyon? Check this out.

Learn more about all the major desert hikes here, (I still need to go all the way to Devil's Den) and rim trails here. But not all of you need to be so enchanted as to actually come to the park, and if you do come? Chillax.

December 28, 2019

Big Bend: First visit in 8 1/2 years

I was a "regular," a "veteran," even, in the previous decade, but hadn't been to Big Bend National Park in 8 1/2 years. I was enough of a veteran, and early enough of one, to have been out there before the Park Service closed the crossing at Boquillas (and Santa Elena, where Mexicans crossed to our side) because some dumb ass in DC thought Osama bin Laden or minions might invade the US from Boquillas, Cohuila, Mexico.

Here's a link to my overall photo album. I'm going to extract just a couple with comments. (All photos embiggen in their album location.) Let's start here:


Living as far away as the Metroplex, I normally drive to about 15 miles south of Marathon (pronounced with a schwa last syllable, unlike the normal) on US 385. Big Bend is an International Dark Sky Park and the darkest national park in the contiguous 48. Even before officially getting into the park, this picture of Orion at top right and Canis Major at lower right should make that clear. I will have more on this in a separate post.

Big Bend has three ecotones: desert, montane and riverine. This photo illustrates two of them: middle-altitude Chihuahuan desert surrounding the Chisos Rim.


The riverine is best capped, by those who know, with a nighttime soak in the 104°F hot springs immediately adjacent to the Rio Grande. I'll have more on this in a future post, too.

This diversity makes it a hot spot for birding, even though it's not on one of the three main north-south migrational flyways. The photo at left, I'm keeping small, so that it doesn't appear too pixelated. This is of an acorn woodpecker. Among new sightings for me that, for various reasons, I didn't glass in my camera, were a lark bunting, a ruby crowned kinglet and a vermilion flycatcher.

As I note, I'll have a couple of more posts in weeks ahead about various issues.

The first of those is now up, as I ponder if Millennials are ruining Big Bend.

Because things have changed in 8 1/2 years. Both posts will address a couple of bigger — one to me, one in general — of these changes.

The Park Service itself has changed some things. It now charges a fee for backcountry camping permits, whether backpacking or primitive car camping. That has been a flat rate, but is scheduled to go to a per-day system next year. Thanks, both Trump and Obama, and both R's and D's in Congress, for failure to adequately fund the NPS. Thanks Obama and Kenny Boy Salazar Shrub Bush (forgot it was that long ago) for the head fake of replacing the old Parks Pass with the new Access Pass, which likely gives only $50 of its $80 to the Park Service, like the old Parks Pass, and instead bribes BLM and USFS with most of the rest to continue to undercharge miners, drillers and loggers. Here's a 2010 story on how the new Access Pass fees split out in the early years after the transfer; the NPS got no extra money, and yep, the other agencies got some. The Park Service itself, and its partner nonprofit, the National Parks Foundation, have themselves become more capitalistic, too.

So, the human hand on the park has changed indeed.

What has not changed is the desert itself. As this slightly stylized photo below shows, hiking back down the Marufo Vega trail, Big Bend is one of our most existential national parks. (Cactus Ed Abbey made one visit here before setting up permanent shop further west.)


Enjoy!

July 03, 2019

Top blogging in June

These are not necessarily blog posts written in June, but ones most popular with readers in the last month.

Topping my list was my call-out of pergressuves (you, Bernie) who want single-payer, but without reining in doctor and hospital prices. I stand by the idea that I don't want the government to go broke on health care costs any more than private individuals.

Second was my statement that I doubt Royce West will seek the Democratic nomination to run against John Cornyn. As of now, I stand by that.

Third was my D-Day post, focused on everything Nigel Hamilton got wrong as well as right in the last book of his trilogy about FDR as Commander in Chief.

Fourth was my reminder — forgotten by the MSM and the courts as well as many librulz at times — that the First Amendment has five freedoms it protects.

Fifth was celebrating the 75th anniversary of Big Bend as a national park.

Sixth was noting how the Lege screwed small school districts.

Seventh, surprisingly, was my writing about online dating pretentiousness from a Beto backer.

June 19, 2019

TX Progressives: Lege screws schools, Abbott screws science
Happy Birthday Big Bend, 2020 previews, Dallas politics

As Gov. Greg Abbott hit the "sign" or "die" deadline Sunday after the Texas Lege's "sine die" wrapup, this week's Texas Progressives roundup nears the finish line of what the Lege did, and did not do, and what Abbott signed off on, from what it did send to him, along with learning the fate of Bobby Lee, discussing the fate of Eric Johnson, and other things.


The Lege

The Lege has apparently royally screwed over smaller school districts in House Bill 3.

The Religious Right laments winning relatively little beyond the save Chick-fil-A nuttery.

The Lege is finally paying for state parks.

But it gave itself an even bigger pass and loopholes on not being covered by public records laws with HB 4181.


Abbott

In one of his wingnut "freedom" moves, and in one of his wingnut "ignoring science" moves, Abbott vetoed a bill requiring rear-facing car seats for toddlers. It may have been another of his revenge vetoes, too.

He did, smartly, use an executive order to extend the life of the State Board of Plumbing Examiners. That also reduces the chances of a special session. (It's also an argument for Texas to have an every-year, rather than banana-republic every-other-year, legislature.)

And he was a weasel in letting the aforementioned HB 4181 become law without his signature.

But, he did legalize industrial hemp and CBD oil.



Texana

SocraticGadfly, through words and pictures from his many trips there, celebrates the 75th anniversary of Big Bend as a national park; besides the pictures in the blog post, a sunset to the west of Big Bend, near Marfa, is pictured at left. (Marfa might still be worth a visit, before getting totally Californicated or Austifornicated.)

 Mean Green Cougar Red celebrates twenty years in the real world.

 Miya Shay scolds the University of Houston for swiping a photographer's work.



What? A Burger?

What? A Burger? is now coming to you from Chitown City as the national hamburger of the Pointy Abandoned Object State™ sells not just a minority stake, as originally rumored, but a majority stake of itself to Chicago investors.

 Dan Solomon is not okay with the sale of What? A Burger?.

Like most Texas "national foods," with the exception of barbecue, it's overrated, IMO. Thus, tweets like:
Are actually kind of funny.

Now, if Whataburger had a good green chile (correct spelling, Texans) burger like New Mexico chain Lotaburger, we'd be talking.


Dallas

Stephen Young asks if the mayor's office is a likely dead end for Eric Johnson. (My answer? On elected politics, at least, yes.) That said, I disagree on one thing; I think Eddie Bernice's seat is Royce West's for the asking first, if he wants it, then Eric Johnson's second.

Young also reports who bought the Bobby Lee statue; the company no-commented.

And, he also notes the city lost a bunch of money settling a porn convention lawsuit.

Jim Schutze reports that one of Dallas' police unions wants chief U. Renee Hall canned.

The crane that killed a downtown Dallas woman should have been able to withstand winds twice as high as what actually brought it down. So what else was wrong and how does this tie to the city's and state's bad record on crane accidents?


State and national politics

Wingnut rural voters who surely, overall, hate single-payer health care despite its likely lowering of costs, and also back their wingnut state politicos in hating Obamacare Medicaid expansion, also hate paying taxes to keep a rural hospital open and will surely refuse to connect the dots.

ConservaDem Henry Cuellar is getting primaried. Meet Jessica Cisneros.

Greater Houston Greens are NOT imploding. David Bruce Collins clears up the mystery of who now owns the party website.

Congressional Dems are fighting back on wall funding.

The Trib looks at Red vs Blue Texas (And ignores Green Texas, whatever color Libertarians identify with, etc.) to see possible Democratic flips in the U.S. House and both houses of the Lege. It also offers up the latest presidential polling.

Stephen Young reports that Former Fetus and Forever Fuckwad Jonathan Stickland has a potential new residence. Judging by the polling in his House district getting tighter and that the Religious Right didn't get much out of this Lege cycle, some of his district might help him move.

Brains offers a Democratic debate preview in his latest 2020 roundup.

Therese Odell says her own goodbye to Lyin’ Sarah Palin.

Off the Kuff has had it with national writers who are clueless about who is running for Senate in Texas. (He has not asked them to mention Sema Hernandez more, I don't think, though I won't snark as much as Brains. And in any case, IMO, Royce West ain't running.)

As Bernie Sanders continue to call himself a "democratic socialist," more and more national magazines are asking "just what does 'socialism' mean in America"?

AOC has called for Congressional pay raises. Nope. Fix the three-day Congresscritter work week, and fix the issue behind that by passing federal campaign financing for Congresscritters, then we'll talk about pay raises. Congresscritters currently get $174K in base salary plus franking money and other expenses. Howie at Down with Tyranny calls out Steny Hoyer for pushing this without mentioning AOC's name. And, unlike him, I do NOT count the money Congresscritters are given to hire staff, because those salaries have to be paid. (That allowance, of nearly $1 million on the House side, includes other expenses as well as hiring staff, to boot. More here on what's false and what's true on what Congresscritters make.) Howie knows all this, too; he wrote his whole piece as a Hoyer smear. That's why I commented there about AOC supporting it, too.

June 12, 2019

Celebrating 75 years of Big Bend National Park

Yes, Big Bend National Park officially achieved that federal status 75 years ago today. Texas Monthly released a special issue earlier this year; here is a selection from it.

Unfortunately, work changes and other things have interrupted what was, last decade, a string of enough visits, usually around Thanksgiving, to make me a "regular."

Mainly through photos, and just a few links, like that dead century plant silhouetted at sunset. I hope to show you why I was a regular. That included a couple of visits to the neighboring Big Bend Ranch State Park, to Terlingua, to Marfa, to Judge Roy Bean history and other spots in the area. And, driving from a place like the Metroplex, I also stopped a couple of times at San Angelo on the way back, when taking back roads. Fort Concho is always worth a visit there. But I digress.

Let's start here with this link of some of the best hikes, and this link with more easy and moderate hikes. The official National Park Service main map will give you more ideas of what's available.

Lost Mine Trail is a moderate difficulty trail with easy access on the way in to the Chisos Basin. It ends with a great overview of the east side of the Chisos Mountains and a canyon besides them, and even into Mexico.

This is a moderate-level hike. For people coming out from sea level, the challenge is increased by the altitude. You're at over 5,000 feet. Pace yourself. And, you're in mountains in a desert area, so dry air along with thinner air. Have some water on your hike.

Also note that I've seen a bear here once. So have many other visitors to the park. Runoff creeks from the Chisos are naturally good areas for shrubs and bushes with heavy fruit production as well as wildlife besides bears when they want meat.

At the top of the trail, you're essentially above the top of the "box" of the box canyon of Ponderosa Canyon. That's one of the few places in Big Bend you can see ponderosas. The trailhead is at the end of a rocky unpaved road that can be taken by 2WD cars, but at no more than 15 mph. If you don't mind the slow drive, it's a great hike.

Next? The Chisos Rim trail.

First, what I said about altitude and dryness apply here. You'll be over 6,000 feet once you get very far up the trail. But the views are more than worth it, especially when you work around more to the south.

That's seeing not just all the way into Mexico, but well, well into Mexico. As part of international cooperation that Trump doesn't get, that's national park land over there, too.

Emory Peak isn't the Rockies, but it does climb to over 7,800 feet. The trail to the peak itself is a spur off the rim trail.

It's a scramble, and literally. It's handhold climbing to the top of the peak itself, as shown at right.

Even if you don't go to the peak, the Rim trail, as shown by the view above, is still worth a hike for sure.

You climb from junipers into pines. You'll find piñons and other species here. Often, they'll have fresh sap, which smells so aromatic, especially in fall and winter, and will unplug any stuffed nose.

Besides the pines and mountain grasses, you may see many other things.

Like a century plant just about ready to bloom.

The trail is several miles, so, again, if you're not used to altitude, allow yourself plenty of time to climb.

Bears may be here on occasion. Ditto on mountain lions, though Grapevine Springs is the most common location in the park, it seems. (Unfortunately, I've never seen one.)

But, the flora is great even without the fauna.

Santa Elena Canyon can be beautiful near sunset. The sunset views take in both Texas and Mexico. The Rio Grande also reflects, in its width or lack thereof, both issues of climate change and seasonal drought within that.

The Windows Trail is fairly rugged, but the Oak Creek Canyon pouroff at end is a great view, also good near sunset.

The South Rim? Get up into the Chisos. Climb Emory Peak if you're game for a scramble near the end.

A nice early morning hike is the Lower Burro Mesa trail.

The inverse? The Upper Burro Mesa Pouroff trail can be nice in late afternoon. When you come back out, you can turn around and enjoy the sunset, as pictured.

The Chihuahuan Desert isn't as pretty at times, to some eyes, as the Sonoran or Mojave deserts, perhaps. But, it has its own sense of beauty, as reflected in pictures like this.

And, in a spot like here, a lesser-hiked trail, the existentialism of the park is good, too. You're alone.

Boquillas Canyon? I was fortunate enough to make the crossing to Boquillas, Mexico, before the park originally shut it down. It's open again, but not every day, and it's under human monitoring.

Mule Ears? Get up close to two volcanic plugs.

The whole old Ore Road area, whether you get to Ernst Tinaja or not, is great.

And, while Thanksgiving is my favorite time of year, spring is great, too. Yucca and wildflowers will both be in bloom by early April. That said, it can already heat up then: When I was once out there in mid-April, Presidio hit 100 my last day in the Big Bend Country.

Remember that it can also push 100 in late October. Have adequate amounts of water. If you're not used to altitude, pace yourself if you're hiking even at the lower portions of the Chisos Mountains themselves, near the Basin visitor center and hotel area.

Beyond the black bears, there's plenty of other wildlife in the area.

Grapevine Hills is the top spot for mountain lion, though, sadly, I have never seen one there.

Almost any place of high human traffic, especially at lower elevation, will have javelinas. Protect your food supplies from them as thoroughly as from black bear.

Rattlers of various species live in this country, as do scorpions. If you're camped out, always check your shoes or boots at the start of a new day.

Besides the poisonous ones, you'll find interesting fun critters like the lubber at left. (They're cousins of grasshoppers.)

And, if you're there in fall, not spring? Cottonwoods will be yellowing on stream beds, with bigtooth maples and sumac turning orange in the mountains.

Besides moves and other things causing some interruptions, I don't hike in general as much as I did years ago. My first 20-plus mile hike (dayhike, not backpack!) was in Big Bend. I did a few others since then. I've hiked at least a little bit in just about every section of the park other than the river except where non-4WDs can get to. As Ed Abbey found out about 70 years ago, you don't take a car on interior roads at Big Bend if the map tells you that you shouldn't. Not that that would have stopped Cactus Ed anyway.

Finally, a bit of a sad note. The Park Service itself, and third-party charities, talk about undervisited parks. Yet, as of noon, neither the National Park Foundation nor the National Parks Conservation Association had anything on Twitter. (The foundation eventually retweeted an Interior tweet, but nothing on its own.) The Sierra Club had something; the Lone Star Chapter for Texas didn't. Center for Biological Diversity didn't — and with its mix of montane, desert and riparian environments, including things like relict populations of bigtooth maples and many songbirds, it is an area of biological diversity. THe first two are the biggies, though, as they're specifically in support of national parks.

Really?

And, going by matters of "focus" on some Twitter accounts I checked, that's it ... it's a matter of focus. It's like someone said several years ago about the ACLU; it had moved from being a civil liberties org into being more of a general liberal activist group.

That's why #GangGreen enviros — or, in the case of the NPF, corporate capitalist bagmen who neoliberalized the centennial of the National Park Service with the shambolic help of Dear Leader — don't get my money.

October 17, 2016

A definite disappointment from Terry Tempest Williams

The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America's National ParksThe Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America's National Parks by Terry Tempest Williams
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I've read some of Williams' shorter writings before, and while not actually a fan, didn't really dislike her.

But, this book somewhat predisposed me against Williams from the first page of the "Note to the Reader."

While some cairns in the desert are necessary guides, like when a trail crosses hundreds of yards of slickrock, or takes a turn out of or into an arroyo, most — especially in national parks — are not. I got the feeling that Williams probably likes cairns in general, including all the unnecessary ones. Some of those were stacked for "I was here" reasons; others, even worse, especially if not right along the trail, are New Agey ones. I suspect Williams likes all three types, and very much the third type.

Per a recent piece in "High Country News," I'm a cairn-kicker when I see unnecessary cairns.

On to the meat of the book.

First, if I'm wanting to seriously read "sweeping" nonfiction about the modern West, I want something like Reisner's "Cadillac Desert," Worster's "Rivers of Empire" or Powell's "Dead Pool." This book is not it.

Second, I wasn't really looking to read a book of family mini-memoirs as part of reflections on NPS units.

Third, I REALLY wasn't looking to read a book with name-dropping of Mormon relatives.

Fourth, the piece allegedly about Canyonlands barely touches the park.

Fifth, there are factual errors.
1. We are NOT "evolving faster than Darwin could have imagined." This nonsense's major error confuses biological and cultural evolution. As far as biological evolution, Darwin, having seen his famous finches, knew how fast biological evolution could work. (282)
2. John Wesley Powell didn't resign from USGS, he was pushed out. (286)
3. John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s younger life was NOT an age of "civility" versus "garish" modernity just because it was still primarily a horse-driving world. (89, 92)

Sixth, this book is otherwise puffery. There's no critical take on the NPS' poor record in recruiting minorities, for example. JDR, per the above, is extensively puffed. Even vis-a-vis topography, there's no critical analysis of the NPS taking over the desert National Recreation Areas caused by BuRec's dammed dams. There's no mention of NPS's commercialization of its centennial, even though the Canyonlands piece includes a copy of a letter to Interior Secretary Sally Jewell.



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July 14, 2010

TCEQ idiocy, Big Bend version

In its protesting EPA taking over the environmental permitting process here in Texas, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality shows exactly why EPA needs to take over.

At an appearance in Odessa, TCEQ Executive Director Mark Vickery is even ready to pooh-pooh National Park air pollution:
He also took some shots at a common foe of the TCEQ and many in the oil and gas business — the federal Environmental Protection Agency. The federal and state agencies have been at odds since the EPA took over the operating permit of a Flint Hills Resources refinery in Corpus Christi in May.

“In some areas we need to have some robust arguments and, frankly, a lawsuit, and we’re pursuing some of them,” Vickery said.

While he said Texas is already seeing results of air quality initiatives, Vickery said new federal proposals would be unreasonable.

“If this hits the low range (of proposed emissions standards limits), Big Bend National Park is out of the range for ozone,” he said.

Uhh, excuse me? It IS out of the range for other air pollutants already. Have you actually looked at its air?

In fact, your own agency, under its old name, admitted that:
Pollution has created a haze that impairs visibility on most days, and 6% of the time visibility is less than 30 miles. According to TNRCC, "the decrease in visibility at Big Bend National Park is among the most pronounced of any national park in the western United States." Meanwhile, the National Park Service (NPS) considers Big Bend to have the "dirtiest air" among all western parks.

And don't just blame Mexico:
The study showed that urban and industrial areas of Houston and Galveston on the Texas Gulf coast are a large source of air contaminants, as is a similar region in North Central Mexico.

Houston? Galveston? That would be the oil refineries you refuse to adequately regulate. Or, the coal-fired power plants and their sulfur compounds

No, ozone isn't the primary problem in Big Bend. But it is part of the problem.

December 28, 2008

Winger talking point for 2009 – no global warming

Here in the U.S., attacking the Employee Free Choice Act as undemocratic may well remain conservative blogosphere Point No. 1. But, denying man-made global warming lets wingers from around the world weigh in, like Christopher Bocker at the Telegraph across the pond.

He, like other global warming denialists, make two basic errors, so basic a sweating pig in a forest could correct him.

First, 2008 was an average y ear within the last decade. So, it didn’t seem hottER than previous years because it wasn’t.

Second, they (usually willfully) conflate weather and climate.

It snowed in New Orleans? Well, to them that means anthropogenic global warming is a lie.

I counter that it got up to 85 degrees in Big Bend National Park the day after Christmas, so global warming is VERY real.

November 27, 2008

BIG BEND ESCAPISM



Big Bend escapism
Escapes me this year.
No four-day weekend
For my Thanksgiving;
I have to work Saturday.
Yes, cry me a river, I know,
As you play your tiny violin for me.
Without justifying myself,
Let me say
That I exchange low pay, and low benefits otherwise,
Even low for my shaky profession,
For some time off,
To enjoy the nature that refreshes me.
A day trip will have to do;
Perhaps Big Bend will come at Christmas.
But for now?
Big Bend escapism escapes me.

— Nov. 26, 2008



At top, the Chisos Rim looking south into the Sierra del Carmen and Mexico; above, me on Emory Peak, the highest point in Big Bend. You can see why I go here every Thanksgiving I can, and I haven't mentioned the 100-degree hot spring.