Human
Events...
Removal
of
cows is an explosive situation
by Audrey
Hudson
04/30/2012
The Forest
Service is trying to figure out how to get rid of a half-dozen frozen
cows
crowded inside a small cabin in the Colorado high country before the
carcasses
thaw and become bear bait in the popular hiking area near Aspen.
The cattle
apparently sought refuge in the structure during a sudden snowstorm and
subsequently froze to death, forest officials say. The gruesome scene
was discovered
by a couple of snowshoeing Air Force cadets in late March.
Rangers say
that to avoid potential dangerous interaction between humans and bears,
they
need to remove the cattle before the snow melts and hungry bears from
all over
come out of hibernation and are drawn to the smell of the thawing cows.
“That’s not
a good mix,” said Forest Service spokesman Steve Segin.
But getting
around environmental rules and regulations, especially in designated
wilderness
areas where the cows expired, is proving to be a conundrum.
Using chain
saws to cut up the cows would be an option, but chain saws are
prohibited in
wilderness areas; removing 6,000 consolidated pounds of frozen cow from
the
abandoned mining cabin would be a colossal task with a machete.
Even if the
rangers could remove the carcasses from inside the cabin, they can’t
truck the
remains out of the area—no roads or motorized vehicles are allowed in
wilderness areas.
The option
of airlifting the cows with a helicopter won’t fly either; using the
aircraft
in this manner over a wilderness area is off-limits.
Fire,
explosives not uncommon
That leaves
the rangers with two possibilities—fire, and explosives. Interestingly,
this is
not an uncommon solution for the Forest Service to remove large dead
animals
that are determined to be a public health concern in popular recreation
areas.
“One of the
options the Forest Service utilizes is the use of explosives to remove
trees or
wildlife like elk that are directly on trails, and one way to dispose
of them
is to blow them up and scatter the remains to speed up composition,”
Segin
said.
“The other
option is fire to burn both (cabin and cows) and then disperse
everything,”
Segin said.
Luckily for
the Forest Service, the old cabin was already targeted for demolition
and the
necessary studies to make sure it held no historical value or contained
any
hazardous materials such as asbestos were nearly completed.
“So this
actually works out well,” Segin said.
Forest
Service officials also insist they won’t have to adhere to the most
cumbersome
regulation of all—the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)—even
though a
court in March struck down the agency’s ability to bypass the law for
projects
that involve minor environmental impact, such as modernizing outhouses
on
nature trails.
“We’re
doing an analysis of the cabin to make sure there are no hazardous
materials,
but that didn’t fall under NEPA—the assessment is just for the cabin
itself and
removing cattle,” Segin said.
The bottom
line is, if restrictions weren’t so onerous, the Forest Service would
have
numerous options to dispose of the animals, like a logging road and the
use of
vehicles to haul away the carcasses, or helicopter.
A decision
needs to be made within the next couple of weeks to beat the spring
thaw, and a
closure order will be posted near the Conundrum Hot Springs where the
cabin is
located, to warn hikers of the cow’s fiery removal.
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