Help Conserve Moab's Water - Drink Rare Utah Wines
During our October 2009, visit to Moab, Utah, we noticed that fall color had arrived in the Spanish Valley.
 The deciduous trees showed bright yellow leaves, but the scarcity of 
freezing weather had produced few of the burnt-orange or flame-red 
leaves we had hoped to see.
Before the sun drops behind the Moab Rim, there is often good light to the north and east. From my vantage point at the Moab Rim CamPark, the Slickrock sparkled in the late afternoon sun. Likewise, the Moab Rim reflected light along the length of its crest. To the east, clouds shaded the La Sal Range .
 Dark green foliage faded into dark gray granite near their summit. As 
the cloud formation moved slowly across the sky, its virga veil trailed 
below. With the recent warm, dry weather, there was no snow, even on the
 highest peaks. In the high country, autumn was over, but winter had not
 yet begun. From the top to bottom, the relict forest of aspen seemed to
 have dropped its leaves all at once, leaving behind only a trace of 
color.
.
 Dark green foliage faded into dark gray granite near their summit. As 
the cloud formation moved slowly across the sky, its virga veil trailed 
below. With the recent warm, dry weather, there was no snow, even on the
 highest peaks. In the high country, autumn was over, but winter had not
 yet begun. From the top to bottom, the relict forest of aspen seemed to
 have dropped its leaves all at once, leaving behind only a trace of 
color.
The next morning, Carrie McCoy and I set off to explore in and around the Spanish Valley. Our first stop was at Johnsons on Top, a mesa bounded by Mill Creek Canyon
 to the north and the Spanish Valley to the south. Several years ago, 
Grand County and the State of Utah approved a low-density, high-end 
residential development on that mesa. When the real estate market 
dematerialized, that project, known as Cloudrock went on hiatus. 
Since last year, the only “improvement” to the mesa 
was additional signage admonishing off-road vehicle drivers to stay on 
the road. For years, the access gate at the road has made it look like 
an entrance to private property. Only the locals and a few Moab 
old-timers know that there is an undeveloped mesa at Johnsons on Top. It
 follows that marauding outsiders probably did not make the many 
off-road tracks we saw that day. More likely, some locals felt entitled 
to make a social road wherever and whenever they pleased, even if it was
 across Utah Trust Land.
At the far rim of the mesa, we snapped our “MoabLive”
 outdoor portraits. From that high ground, we saw Mill Creek Canyon 
below. The dust storms of spring 2009 had hastened snowmelt upstream in 
the La Sal Range. Pools of sand, terraced in the streambed, provided an 
illusion of flowing water. A photo of the La Sal Range that we took from
 that spot one year prior showed a snowpack at high elevation. 
When the creek went dry, the Grand Water and Sewer Service Agency (GWSSA) had to close its Sheley Diversion Tunnel from Mill Creek.
 When water no longer flowed down the tunnel to Ken’s Lake, the 
reservoir had no other replenishment source. By October 2009, demand for
 irrigation had drained the reservoir almost to the elevation of its 
outfall pipe. Over-subscription and overuse of Ken’s Lake water 
resources are now a fact. If early snowmelt becomes the norm, future 
years may bring only one brief shot at filling Ken’s lake. As the major 
source of irrigation water for the Spanish Valley, that resource may now
 be too valuable to support large-scale alfalfa farming in the desert. 
Using data collected in 2001, the Utah Department of
 Environmental Quality/Division of Water Quality (DEQ/DWQ) found 
increased temperature to be the major “pollutant” present in Ken’s Lake.
 Blaming it on solar heating alone, the DEQ/DWQ petitioned the U.S. EPA 
to reclassify the lake as a “warm water fishery”, rather than to find 
ways to retain its old designation as a “cold water fishery”. In so 
doing, they ignored the fact that only 400 acre feet of water is 
normally present in Ken's Lake at the end of any summer season. Perhaps 
it was not obvious to the state agency, but such a small pool of water 
exposed to the summer sun near Moab would rise in temperature. 
The solution to this dilemma rests largely with 
farmers in the Spanish Valley. By leaving a higher residual waterline in
 the lake each year, that larger mass should not heat up as quickly as 
the smaller pool now does. That would require a "conservation 
mentality", rather than the current "extraction mentality". In October 
2009, there was barely enough water in Ken's Lake to  support
 a small warm water fish population. It would soon drop to its minimum 
level, after providing Spanish Valley grape growers the final shot of 
irrigation water necessary to protect their rootstock from the coming 
winter freeze. In less than ten years, Ken’s Lake has gone from full to 
empty and from cold to warm. If spring 2010 again brings dust storms to 
the La Sal Range, expect to see hotter water and less of it at Ken’s 
Lake. With the recent spate of regional dust storms and the continued 
drying of the western climate, we believe that the new pattern of rapid snowmelt is likely to continue.
support
 a small warm water fish population. It would soon drop to its minimum 
level, after providing Spanish Valley grape growers the final shot of 
irrigation water necessary to protect their rootstock from the coming 
winter freeze. In less than ten years, Ken’s Lake has gone from full to 
empty and from cold to warm. If spring 2010 again brings dust storms to 
the La Sal Range, expect to see hotter water and less of it at Ken’s 
Lake. With the recent spate of regional dust storms and the continued 
drying of the western climate, we believe that the new pattern of rapid snowmelt is likely to continue. 
Departing the mesa, we came upon a ridge overlooking
 the Spanish Valley. From there we saw a high desert environment, 
sprinkled with irrigated fields, ranchettes and homes. With the Pueblo 
Verde Tract directly below us, we scanned the valley for other signs of 
irrigated life. In the center of the valley, we saw greenery that was 
the vineyards at the Spanish Valley Vineyards and Winery.
 According to their website, the estate comprises several acres of 
vineyard and its attendant small farm winery, both of which are owned 
and operated by the Dezelsky Family. There, they grow and produce wines 
made from Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, Gewurztraminer and Riesling grapes,
 as well as a unique cherry wine. 
Having found the tasting room closed Sundays, on a 
Monday afternoon we made our second attempt to visit the winery. Located
 on Zimmerman Lane, just off Highway 191 South, the winery would benefit
 from a “cultural location sign” on the highway. In California, each 
wine-growing county provides tasteful highway signage directing 
motorists to local wineries. Perhaps Utah will see both the economic and
 the environmental light and then begin promoting their rare vineyards 
and wineries.
When nearby Arches
 Vineyards and Winery ceased production, the Dezelsky’s bought their 
remaining stock of bulk wine, finishing it under the Spanish Valley 
Winery label. In 1998, the owners of Red Cliffs Lodge
 purchased Arches Winery, collocating it with the lodge and renaming it 
Castle Creek Winery. When Castle Creek Winery opted to purchase grapes 
from outside of the state, that left Spanish Valley Winery as the last 
which grows, produces and bottles only Utah appellation wines. In almost
 any state other than Utah, that alone would be enough to elevate the 
winery to the status of a cultural landmark. In a state which legalized 
bonded wine making only in 1988, the state's overall attitude towards 
wineries and wine making remains one of indifference and neglect.
One needs to look only as far away as the Mimbres Valley near Deming, New Mexico to find St. Clair Vineyard and Winery
 producing and bottling a fine New Mexico Zinfandel, among other 
varietals. Luna Rossa Winery also grows and produces in the Mimbres 
Valley, at an elevation similar to the Spanish Valley. Both valleys sit 
atop large aquifers. The sensible way in which New Mexico supports 
desert viticulture provides an example of how Utah might support its own
 growers and producers.
As a 
bonded winery, Spanish Valley Winery represents a way of life once 
thought to have great promise in Southeastern Utah. Our friend Jim 
Farrell told us that his Moab Rim Campark
 used to include the phrase “and Vineyard” on its highway sign. Patrons 
of the RV Park loved the ambiance that the vineyard provided. When 
interest in viticulture waned in this century, Jim redeveloped the 
vineyard into a row of rental spaces for recreational vehicles. Although
 he enjoyed being a grower, economics dictated that Jim sacrifice 
romance for economic necessity. 
 
In the 1970s, a 
University of Arizona viticulture survey found great promise in the 
Spanish Valley. With its highly mineralized, gravelly soil, hot days and
 cool nights, the study concluded that the Spanish Valley had potential 
to become one of the premier viticulture areas in the country. That 
survey, plus the backing of one Utah state agency encouraged locals to 
plant grapes. In the late 1980s, just as the first viable crops matured,
 another state agency declared that winemaking was illegal in Utah. By 
1988, when winemaking became legal in Utah, many of the early growers 
had abandoned or removed their vineyards. The few stalwart growers 
remaining near Moab have only Spanish Valley and Castle Creek wineries 
as outlets for the sale of their grapes.
More 
recently, former Governor Jon Huntsman pushed the Utah legislature to 
rationalize Utah's liquor laws. Until then, the unofficial stance by the
 state was disdain for Utah winemaking and sales at its wineries. Since 
the 1970’s, whenever latter-day Utah wine makers went up against the 
moral strictures of the Latter Day Saints Church, the winemakers lost 
every time. Even now, one cannot taste or purchase wine on a Sunday or 
holiday at any Utah winery. An official summary of Utah Liquor Laws does
 not even mention wineries or their tasting rooms. With almost sixty 
days of forced closure each year, how can any business expect to 
prosper? This is ironic in Utah, which retains a state monopoly on the 
sale of all packaged liquor, except for beer. With politics, morality 
and economics stacked against Utah’s small farm wineries, is it any 
wonder that this potentially rich viticulture area grows alfalfa instead
 of grapes?
As of this
 writing, the Spanish Valley Vineyard and Winery is offered for sale. 
For over twenty years, the Dezelsky’s have either worked for or owned 
the operation. By their choice, it is time for them to move on. A sale 
of the property will allow a new owner to build on their solid 
reputation as producers of Utah appellation wines. For less than two 
million dollars, a new owner could own acres of cultivated vineyards, an
 abundance of high tech equipment and facilities that could handle far 
larger production.
In 2009, the Christian Science Monitor wrote that the Four Corners area is already hotter and drier than it was fifteen years ago. Not since the Great Disappearance of Pre-Puebloan Indians
 around 1200 CE, has the climate been this hot or dry. With that 
knowledge, the State of Utah should actively encourage, rather than 
discourage its citizens from growing grapes and producing wine. An easy 
way to show that they care would be to allow bonded wineries to offer 
tasting and retail sales on Sundays and some holidays. For the moralists
 among us, the overall consumption of alcohol in Utah would not rise 
perceptibly. Raising water-stingy grapes with drip-irrigation might then
 become a viable economic alternative to growing water-thirsty alfalfa 
in the desert. Additionally, Utah should allow tasteful highway signage,
 directing visitors to each rare and unique winery in the state.
When dust bowl storms swept across the Great Plains in the 1930’s, the federal government Shelterbelt Program
 encouraged farmers to plant trees as windbreaks, thus retaining loose 
soil in their fields. Farmers and ranchers in Southeastern Utah should 
likewise be encouraged to plant grape-arbor windbreaks
 adjacent to their fields. By doing so, the arbors could help diminish 
the intensity of regional dust storms that now plague the area. At Monument
 Valley High School, Utah, a small plot of grapes grows near the 
athletic field. Could this signal a renaissance in viticulture in 
Southeastern Utah? For the sake of the few remaining warm-water fish in 
Ken’s Lake and all of us who love Utah wines, we hope so.
After 
leaving the winery, we spotted a large American Bison resting in the 
well-watered yard of a home on Spanish Valley Drive. In the 1870s, bison
 herds were so large that transcontinental rail traffic often halted for
 hours so that the animals could cross the tracks. Despite their 
historically large numbers, they did not destroy their natural 
environment. As the wheels of off-road vehicles sink ever deeper into 
the soft soils of Johnsons on Top and other mesas, we must face facts. 
Creation of new social roads in the desert threatens both our soil and 
our water. Inadequate water conservation threatens to leave us like that
 lone bison, resting under the desert sun on the last patch of irrigated
 soil in the Spanish Valley.
 
By James McGillis at 12:58 PM | Environment | Comments (0) | Link
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