Moab, Utah - Matheson Wetlands Wildfire
On Wednesday, October 22, I departed Moab, Utah
after three weeks of hard work, learning and meeting many new friends.
There is so much about Moab, the place, the time and the happenings that
I want to share, it is hard to know where to start.
While ensconced in my Pioneer travel trailer at the Moab Rim Campark
the night before, I heard fire engines racing north, on nearby Highway
191. Although the nearest fire department to the south is in Monticello, Utah, fifty miles away, that fact did not register with me. Somehow, it was nice just to hear that an emergency was receiving an emergency response, as we would wish if our property were in peril.
On Wednesday morning, I hustled down to the RV Park
office to create the final changes on our new webcam, streaming live
from that location. With the consent of Jim and Sue Farrell, the
proprietors at Moab Rim Campark, we had installed a webcam up under the
eaves of their second story. Offering a panoramic view of the RV Park,
Highway 191, the Slickrock area and the La Sal Mountains,
our new webcam offers the world a completely new view of Moab, Utah and
its weather patterns. If you like, you can view the webcam at MoabLive.com or MoabRV.com.
Just click on either link and be patient as the webcam loads. With the
view changing every five seconds day or night, I assure you that you
will not be disappointed.
Wednesday morning, I was so busy with the webcam that I failed to notice a column of smoke rising from the Matheson Wetlands Preserve,
which fills the space between the City of Moab and the nearby Colorado
River. According to the Wildlife Action Plan (WAP) for the area, the
Matheson Preserve's lowland riparian habitat is the most critical
habitat type in all of Utah. As a unique wetland, it formed when the
Colorado River bend in the Spanish Valley eroded its outside bank,
leaving its former watercourse as a tangled swamp or reeds, bulrushes
and non-native Tamarisk trees.
As
with so much of the Desert West, the Matheson Wetlands are no longer as
wet as they once were. Although the water table there rises and falls
with spring runoff or the occasional thunderstorm, a system of
irrigation and water control dikes has turned much of the southern pond
into “solid ground”. Hunters and others camp or party in clearings,
amidst the tangled undergrowth found throughout the preserve. Did one
such individual or group leave a campfire unattended the prior day?
Perhaps ironically, the fire appears to have overlapped a prescribed
burn originally planned for October 2008. That burn was only a small
part of a wetlands restoration project planned for the preserve.
As I connected my pickup and travel trailer that
morning, the wind came up and swept the fire from up near Highway 191
and the Colorado River, downstream to the gap where Kane Creek Road
meets the river canyon. Luckily, the firefighters stopped the fire
there, but it was dramatic to watch, even from several miles away.
As I prepared to drive back to Los Angeles, I
remembered a bit of Moab history. In 1855, eight years after founding
Salt Lake City, a party of forty-three Mormon men built a rock fort in
the area now called the Matheson Wetlands Preserve, near the Colorado
River. Growing crops and attempting to convert local Native Americans
to their religion became the Mormons’ primary challenges. Additionally,
they sought control of the strategic river crossing and trade with
travelers along the wagon road known as the “Old Spanish Trail”.
The naming of Moab retains elements of controversy.
Some say that the original settlers named Moab for its appearance,
supposedly being similar to an area located on the eastern side of the
River Jordan. Others say Moab was a bastardization of the Paiute Indian
word “moapa”, meaning mosquito. Either way, with the coming of regular
postal service and incorporation of the town in 1902, the name Moab
became official.
Several months after their 1855 arrival, Native
Americans attacked the Moabites, burning crops and killing three
settlers. The Mormons then abandoned Moab, not to officially return
until 1878. With its cultural affinity and geographical proximity to
Colorado and Arizona, Moab grew into the twentieth century more as a
typical Western town than as a Mormon colony.
To my knowledge, the remnants of the old fort did
not survive the one hundred fifty-plus years of mud and floods visited
upon the Matheson Wetland Preserve by the mighty Colorado River.
Perhaps the denuding of that area will lead to renewed archeological
interest in locating remnants of Moab’s original, if brief, non-native
culture.
By James McGillis at 06:25 PM | Environment | Comments (0) | Link
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