The Majestic La Sal Range Overshadows the Desolation of "Poverty Flat"
On April 15, 2012, I spent my day to revisiting special  locations in and around the Spanish Valley,  near Moab, Utah. By midday, I had completed an ecological survey of Behind the Rocks,  ten miles south of Moab. After lunch, I depart the Moab Rim Campark,
  heading south on U.S. Highway 191. Although I did not know exactly 
where I might  find it, I was looking for an unobstructed view of the La Sal Range.
Near the eastern end of the Spanish Valley, I turned left on to a rough 
gravel  road that leads to Pack Creek. With jagged gravel the size of 
golf balls, the  road was not favorable to travel with my fully inflated
 road tires. Limping  along at a slow pace, I finally found an 
unobstructed view of the La Sal Range.  There, in mid afternoon, the sun shone down on the mountains and reflected off  fresh snow that fell the previous night.
After
 pausing to photograph the mountains, I turned my attention to the power
  lines that hung overhead. From earlier discussions with Moab 
residents, I knew  that these high voltage lines originated at a  coal fired power plant near Price, Utah to the north. From where I stood, I  could see what looked like a series of energy beings
  carrying the electrical cables up the valley from Moab. After passing 
overhead,  the lines continued their climb up the Spanish Valley and 
then over the  mountains of San Juan  County. Where they ended, I had no idea. 
Here I shall explain the difference between the Moab Valley and the Spanish Valley.
  Other than there being a name change near the San Juan County line, 
there is no  geographical difference between the two valleys. Anywhere 
near Moab, residents  call the drainage the Moab Valley. To the east, in
 its upper reaches, most  people call it the Spanish Valley. The most 
beleaguered area of the valley,  around Ken’s Lake  also carries the historical name, “Poverty  Flat”. 
Having
 experienced the most prolonged overgrazing of any area near Moab, 
Poverty  Flat is apt moniker for that area. Today, it supports only 
sparse seasonal  grasses and a particularly thorny species of cactus. 
With a large swath of the  valley teeming with cactus spikes, no one 
would dare to graze cattle there now.  
Even for a hiker the Poverty Flat landscape is like an ankle-high low 
forest of  knife blades. Consequently, the area just west of the Ken’s Lake Dam
 is  now a no man’s land, bereft of greenery and populated only by the 
hardiest  desert dwelling species. In the 1890’s, grass in the Moab and 
Spanish Valleys  grew so high that it hid from view horseback riders who
 approached town on the  Old Spanish Trail. Current visitors to the 
Spanish Valley realize that the  area near Ken's Lake is an inhospitable place,
 but most have no idea that  just over one hundred years ago, this was a
 Garden of Eden, not the current rock  and cactus garden.
Since it once held the Old Spanish Trail,
 I believe that early visitors,  ranchers and miners referred to the 
entire valley as the Spanish Valley. Later,  as Moab became a more 
prominent feature, residents and outsiders alike began  calling the 
lower, western reaches the Moab Valley. Today,  the Google Map of the Spanish Valley
  as the portion of the greater valley inside the border of San, Juan 
County.  Given the importance of Moab and the remoteness of the eastern 
part of the  valley, Google’s dual designation of the Moab Valley and 
the Spanish Valley  seems like a good one to me.
After viewing the extreme environmental destruction in the Spanish 
Valley, I  headed for the human made creation called Ken’s Lake. You may
 read about that  visit in my next article.
     
  
By James McGillis at 05:08 PM | | Comments (0) | Link

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