Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Greetings,
1/29/04
I hope this email
finds you well.
I couldn't help but
notice your reference to our organization, the
Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands Center (not Project).
First of all, I
appreciate your web-site very much. I think you do
an admirable job. I wish that our site had the
depth and number of visitors that yours does.
Unfortunately it does not. I think you do a great
job of compiling and disseminating information,
and of giving a voice to people who feel
voiceless. The prayer page is a fantastic idea.
Now I can't speak for
Derek, he's a construction worker and doesn't
spend much time on the net, but I'm a good friend
of his and I was at the meeting at which he (and
I) spoke. So I can at least try to answer the
question you posed to him: "Derek,
how many sacred owls and bambi's and old-growth
trees did you find after the Biscuit Fire?"
Well,
I don't know what a sacred owl is, but the Spotted
Owl figures can be found in the Rogue River/South
Coast Biological Assessment for FY 04-08. Another
interesting document for learning about the
impacts of the fire on wildlife is the Comments on
Draft Environmental Impact Statement For Biscuit
Recovery Project by Jerry Franklin, of the
University of Washington. I recommend both, and
don't know that I can summarize them in way that
does them justice. But a lot of people who know
more about owls than I do believe that the large
boles and snags that are left behind following a
fire provide the only post-fire habitat for most
of the owl prey-base.
I
wish that you had attended the Medford BLM/Walden
meeting that the article is about. I know you've
seen your share of federal dog and pony shows
in which the public, or anyone with an opposing
viewpoint, is ignored. Well, this was invite only,
and was a who's who of the timber industry. Which
is fine, but it won't lead to balanced, or fully
representative decision making.
The point that Derek
and I were trying to make in a hostile
environment, is that at the same time the BLM is
saying that it wants to thin small-diameter trees
that tend to burn high-intensity, they are
clearcutting old-growth and establishing more
small-diameter fiber plantations that will require
the same treatment...in other words, we think they
are intentionally creating a vicious circle.
I know we probably
come at this from very different views, but I
appreciate your time and your site.
Keep up the good
work, and stay vigilant.
For the owls (sacred
or not)
and for the people-
George
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