 The Farmer and the Cowboy Should Be Friends (of the  Environment)
The Farmer and the Cowboy Should Be Friends (of the  Environment)
   
 	In early October 2011, I made my annual fall 
pilgrimage to  	Moab, Utah. Having lived there for three months in the 
fall of 2005, I knew  	that October weather in Moab was unpredictable. 
After the first cold front  	of the season blew in with me, I was 
surprised at how quickly weather in the 	 	Spanish Valley returned to its default position, which is Indian summer.
 
 	When I arrived, I saw a few campers in the 
campground, yet on  	only one boat floating upon the lake. As I watched,
 I could see the oarsman  	rowing his pontoon-style fishing boat towards
 shore. Although I stood no  	further than thirty feet from where he 
made landfall, the old angler never  	looked up or acknowledged my 
presence.
 
 	Only when I asked him why the lake was so high 
this year did  	he speak. He gave me a few matter-of-fact sentences, 
telling me all that I  	needed to know. “It was a good snow year. There 
was still snow on the  	north-facing slopes until August. The slower 
snowmelt this year kept filling  	the lake, even 	 	 as
  	irrigation water flowed from the dam. Still, it hasn’t rained much 
lately  	and the lake is a lot lower than it was just a few weeks ago.” 
After I  	thanked him for the information, he returned to his silent 
mode, placed his  	boat on a small trailer and drove away without 
another word.
as
  	irrigation water flowed from the dam. Still, it hasn’t rained much 
lately  	and the lake is a lot lower than it was just a few weeks ago.” 
After I  	thanked him for the information, he returned to his silent 
mode, placed his  	boat on a small trailer and drove away without 
another word.
 
 	After he departed, I marveled at the differences I
 could see  	from just one year earlier, in October 2010. When I wrote 
an article about  	that visit, I called it “Ken’s  	Puddle”,
 which is what it looked like to me. At that time, I suggested  	that 
farmers and others who shared in Ken’s Lake water might want to look  	
towards conservation of this resource, rather than exploitation. Did my 
 	words and wishes have some positive effect on water levels in the 
lake? On  	the other hand, did fewer 	 	regional dust storms this year keep more snow in the higher reaches of  	the La Sal Range watershed until later in the season?
  
By James McGillis at 08:16 PM | | Comments (0) | Link

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