Bill McDonald's family has owned the grazing rights for Sycamore Ranch for more than a century.
The ranch sits on 21,000 acres in the Peloncillo Mountains, a range that straddles the Arizona-New Mexico state line. It's about 50 miles north of the border, and Border Patrol often travel up and down the area.
In June, about a tenth of the land was singed as a controlled wildfire moved across it.
“The Hog Fire was about 1,350 acres," said McDonald. "And the other one was about 500 acres on my allotment.”
That made McDonald Happy. “If you don’t burn in this country, you are going to lose your grass over time,” McDonald said. McDonald is one of many ranchers in this area that believe fire is helping restore their allotted lands. They banded together in 1992, along with environmentalists and academics to form the Malpai Borderlands Group.
Fire was, and still is, one of the main issues that brought them together.
“We came together over many meetings, mainly having to do with this issue of fire,” said McDonald.
Each year, as the weather warms up and fire season draw near, the group talks with those who manage the public lands they use for grazing in order to make their wishes for the land known.
That includes a map of who owns rights to which allotments, and if they'd like that land have a controlled fire burn over it if the chance arises.
“When we found out we had a fire in this location, the first thing we do is try and figure out who’s going to be most affected by it, and who do we need to talk to, who do we need to see what their preferences might be,” said Kevin Warner, the district ranger for the Coronado National Forest's Douglas District.
When two fires started on Douglas District land in July, Warner did exactly that.
He found out it was McDonald's land, and McDonald quickly new the answer.
“I got a call from the district, and they said, ‘what would you like us to do?’" McDonald said. "I said, ‘well, I’d kind of like it to burn. It’s in a good place.’ Because it had started on my allotment. That’s what they did.”
The fires were managed, and consumed about 14,000 acres total...more
Another glowing report on federal lands by a federally-funded media outlet (PBS). The media always like it when ranchers take collective action.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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