Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Cows heal the land in heart of Coal Basin

Help is being harnessed from an unlikely source to repair a damaged and desolate landscape in the White River National Forest in the mountains west of Redstone. Cows were enlisted to help break up the thin layer of soil covering waste-coal piles in Coal Basin, roughly six miles from Redstone. The ground on a 1-acre test plot on the massive pile has been covered with straw mixed with grass and hay seed. The cows' split hooves till the hard ground and work in the seeds, while their waste provides the fertilizer. The hope is that the grass germinates, takes hold and allows the slopes to hold water better, said Ben Carlson, a range technician with the Aspen-Sopris Ranger District of the Forest Service. That way rainfall won't immediately run off the hardened soil and carry sediment into Coal Creek and ultimately to the Crystal River...more

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