Thursday, August 4, 2011

Saw Flowers on Ski Hill

Forgot to mention:  Death camas is blooming all over the ski runs.  All it took was some moisture.  Also saw the light lavender wild geranium, erigeron which must be getting on in age as it's losing its color and tending toward whiteness, maybe whitlow grass, Indian paintbrush, yarrow, lots of fireweed.

The moisture made the distance viewing misty so I couldn't see the Water Canyon area to assess the Las Conchas fire damage.  I could see the first part of the CaƱada Bonita/Nordic/Snowshoe trails well enough to see they are quite burnt.   Cerra Bonita, the mountain directly north of Pajarito, has some burn damage  - more toasted than charcoalized, if I'm remembering correctly.  Need to go up on a clear day with a pair of binoculars.

Pajarito Mountain - Finally

Finally had time to drive to the Pajarito Mountain Ski Area and walk up Pajarito Mountain.  It was cloudy and thunder sounded a warning now and then but I made it to the back of the mountain.  I walked up the Zero Road East jeep road to the logging road on the south side of Pajarito Mountain, below the lone antenna perched on the easternmost of Pajarito's double peaks.

After enduring the Las Conchas fire, the ski hill looks surprisingly normal from the area of the ski lodge - still pretty in green and moist from the generous rains we've gotten this week!  On the jeep road, I walked past numerous patchy burns.

From the south back-side of Pajarito I could see a portion of the northern ridge of Cerro Grande has been severely blackened.  It looks like the part of Cerro Grande owned by Valles Caldera National Preserve.  I couldn't see into Valle Canyon but could clearly see that the fire had danced across Valle Canyon because the Knife-edge ridge between Valle and Pajarito canyons has definite blackening. 

How many more times can firefighters save the the ski hill, the lab and the town before forest managers take serious steps to thin the forests and to step up their prescribed burns?  Our forests are beautiful but they are too thick with trees.  Drought makes them prone to insect infestation and wildfire.  The forests of the Jemez Mountains will continue to be victims of global climate change and severe drought conditions like that which existed when the Las Conchas wildfire started the end of June.    It's very good that the ski hill, lab and town were saved but what can be done to protect our forests from stand-destroying wildfires and make them more resilient to the vagaries of climate change and wildfires?