Monday, August 1, 2011

Sustainable Town-Boulder, Colorado

We visited Boulder, Colorado on June 9. One of my favorite things about the environment is green design. Boulder has a downtown that is partly blocked off to cars- there is a pedestrian walkway down a few blocks- so people can walk to the shops or bike or scooter if they please. The downtown is revitalized with art and music events, a farmer's market, cafe's, shops- just a great place to hang out with a great community vibe.


Part of the pedestrian walkway.


People friendly sign and map.

Local Shop with its own flavor.

Cool sign emphasizing walking.

Local Art!

National Parks- Arches/Canyonlands

Arches/Canyonlands National Parks
While in Moab, Utah-we stayed at a campsite right next to the Colorado River surrounded by red canyons. The evening of June 30, we went to Arches National Park. We took a short hike to Delicate Arch to view the arch at sunset. I did not realize that the arch would not be facing in the direction of the sunset- it was like look at the arch, turn around and oh there is the sunset. Still it was breathtaking.
The spec in the middle of the arch that's me.
Photo Credit: Trish Seelman

The next day on July 1st we went to Canyonlands National Park that was about an hour drive through the desert just to get to the park off the main road! The park was beautiful of course and had many different types of geological features like the needles.
Part of Needle District in Canyonlands.

We did not get to see much of the park though- our original hike was cancelled due to the fact part of it was underwater. We instead took a short drive around the park to a few lookout points. When I go back out West I would definitely want to explore this park more.
Canyonlands National Park.
Photo Credit: Trish Seelman

The Ladies at Canyonlands.
Photo Credit: Kristen Meidt
That night on July 1st-we had a final dinner at an authentic restaurant- La Hacienda- we also got a chance to walk around downtown Moab, Utah which was a very charming town with little shops and cafes. I love walkable towns with local flavor!

Book Reflection: Restoring the Colorado River Ecosystems

Restoring Colorado River Ecosystems: A troubled sense of Immensity    By: Robert W. Alder


This book I feel was the most important book we read for our trip out West. This book goes through all the projects that have occurred along the Colorado River (dams and all) and how these projects have affected the wildlife and vegetation of the river. As a class we followed the path of the River through the West.
            In Colorado, we spoke with the Western Resource Advocates who told us about the infamous Colorado Water Compact that divides the water of the river into the Upper and Lower Basin States. While in Rocky Mountain National Park, we stopped and saw where the Colorado River began.
In Utah, we camped next to Flaming Gorge Dam’s reservoir. We also camped next to the Colorado River when we were near Moab, Utah.
In Arizona, we hiked to the bottom of the Grand Canyon and saw how the river had carved out the immense canyon. We visited the controversial Glen Canyon Dam and camped next to the Dam’s reservoir, Lake Powell. We also saw how the river cut out the picturesque Horseshoe Bend.
In Nevada, we witnessed Las Vegas and how the damming of the Colorado has made that city possible. On the border of Nevada and California we drove by Hoover Dam and took picture of its reservoir, lake Mead.
 In California, we saw the irrigation canals that carry Colorado River water to cities and farmland. I did research on the various state and federal projects in California and how they distribute the River’s water to the many thirsty Californians.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Book Reflection-Dying of the Trees

Dying of the Trees by Charles E. Little


 The Take Home Message of Book was:

Trees dying at a rapid rate will only further the velocity at which more trees will die. And in fact something worse will happen where due to this effect trees may in fact end up becoming net producers of CO2 rather CO2 removers. Maintaining a decent oxygen rate in the atmosphere is important. It is currently at 21%. If it rose to 25% a lightening strike would like the earth ablaze. And if it decreased to 15% a fire could not even be lit.’
The more CO2 in the air- the more effects of climate change we see. One of the major examples of climate change from the book I saw out west was the destruction of pine trees by the burrowing pine beetle. Summers are now warmer and the beetles do not die off in the winter time. Now there are more beetles to eat the pine trees all year long. When we visited Rocky Mountain National Park and Yosemite National Park the mountains were covered in purple tree. At first you think it is beautiful the contrast of green and purple trees, but then you learn the purple trees are dead trees. After your eyes have been opened to the truth the mountains quickly lose their beauty.

Book Reflection- Water in California

Introduction to Water in California by David Carle
 This book is a very concise and easy beginner’s guide to water issues in California.
Insert annual map of rain fall in California.


Most growth in California takes place where there is little water. Massive projects have been put into place to get the water from the north, from the Sierra Nevada Mountains as well as the Colorado River to the arid central and south of the state.
There are 20,000 miles of rivers and streams in California from 60 major watersheds. Only one of the state’s major rivers systems, the Smith River on the North Coast, is completely free of dams. The book says that there are six major water delivery systems in California: four that I have talked about previously in the blog- The California State Water Project, Central Valley Project (federal), Colorado River delivery systems and the Tuolumne River/Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct. The other two are the Los Angeles Aqueduct, and Mokelumne Aqueduct to the East Bay. 
California State Water Projects pipelines and canals travel over 600 miles from north to south California. It is the largest state water project in the United States.
The Central Valley Project, which was sanctioned by Theodore Roosevelt and built by the Army Corp of Engineers during the Great Depression, is one of the largest water systems in the world. It stores over 17 million acre-feet of water or about 17% of states’ developed water which it delivers to 8 water districts.
The book mentions the infamous Colorado River Compact. The Imperial Irrigation district gets most of the allotment of water from the River in CA that includes the Coachella and All-American Canals. The book also mentions the Metropolitan Water District which provides 60 % of the water in this southern region of CA from Ventura to Mexico; the Colorado in the travels 242 miles  Colorado River Aqueduct to the MWD.
Remember the talk I mentioned in the blog about Harmonie Hawley and Water in the West while we visited the University of California. I talked about over-pumping of ground water in Orange County, CA.  Ground water is more evenly distributed in California than surface water. Ground water is a more local source of water- meaning less need for long-distance (very long) transport of water. There are 850 million acre feet of groundwater in CA, twenty times more than the surface water.  The Central Valley alone over-pumps 800,000 million acre feet of water a year. The entire state of California over-pumps 2.3 million acre feet of water per year.
Agriculture is another concern in California- the state produces about 55% of the entire countries produce. Nine million acre feet of farmland depend on irrigation from state and federal projects and each year about 15,000 acres of farmland is lost to urban sprawl. I got to see the vast amounts farmland in California as we visited the Dairy Farm in the Central Valley.
Honestly, it is impressive how much California has engineered their water. The report of snowfall in the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains are of more concern than the local weather reports to Californians. Without massive water projects in CA only about 3 million people would live in southern California compared to the 18 million that live there today.

Book Reflection- Canaries of the Rim

Canaries on the Rim-living downwind in the west by Chip Ward

                This book is from the perspective of Mr. Ward and his personal battle with protecting the environment. He moves out west living in Utah and Nevada and while there is faced with many interesting environmental problems like a magnesium refinery with chlorine gas emissions through the roof, warhead missiles scattered among the desert,  and a former  nuclear test site just to name a few. He truly tried to act whenever he felt there was an environmental injustice forming commissions, signing petitions and doing his own scientific studies. It makes me feel that I too have the power to act when I feel the government or state or anyone isn’t treating the environment justly.
                The Cow got stuck in the Chimney:
                Cows poop in everyone’s drinking water and this is awful because cow poop has a protozoan, giardea, which causes dysentery. Cows are a “square peg in a desert’s round hole.” They “kick up dust, compact soils, breakdown surfaces that fix nitrogen into the soil, erode hill sides, and chew out stressed plants down to the nubs.” After gold rush, there was a cow rush out West. In 1863 there were 97,000 cows grazing parched Santa Barbara County in California.
In this chapter of Ward’s book he is obviously talking about the negative effects cows have had on the environment. While out west, we saw first a dairy farm and learned that cows eat about 100 pounds of food each day and drink up to 1-2 tubs of water per day; cows add a huge strain onto the environment. If we ate less meat, produced less cows, and used the farmland that would have fed a cow to feed people we could end hunger in the United States.
We out west also visited methane digester which is a type of energy system where you capture the methane released from cow poop and use the methane to generate electricity. If nothing else cows in Southern California can be looked at as an energy source.

Landing on the Rim of the Great Basin:
                The Great Basin is considered a “wasteland”- a redundant landscape of mostly dry desert and small mountain ranges-it was looked upon as an obstacle to westward expansion.
I can see why people say the Great Basin located in Nevada as a wasteland. It is a huge hot, dry piece of land. While in Las Vegas, I was on top of the Stratosphere looking over the city. You could see the lights of the city expand below you and then abruptly stop in the distance. Was there an ocean out there in the distance, why did the lights of the city just suddenly stop? Well, it is because Las Vegas is built in a desert, which is no ocean, its desert. Also when we were in Reno, Nevada I could not get over how windy it was. It is so windy because again a big city in a desert just in northern not southern Nevada. There are no obstacles to block the wind just open land so therefore Reno is very windy.
Cowboys in Gas Masks:
There are 1,140 of those are uranium mines in Utah according to the book. We were graced with visiting one uranium mine while we were outside Moab, Utah. The mine we visited thankfully was being cleaned up by the Department of Energy but it still was right on the edge of the Colorado River so who knows if any of the radioactive material touched the water supply.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Natural Resources- Zylstra Dairy Farm and Hilmar Cheese-California

From June 24 till June 25 we stayed at Zlystra Dairy Farm located in Modesto, California. I feel after visiting the farm it is a hybrid between an organic and commercial farm. The cows were milked by machine and identified by number but the cows were fed very well, got the best medical care when they were sick and their stalls were cleaned a few times a day so the cows were not standing in their own poop for too long. The farm has 2,000 cows total on it.

The front of the Zlystra Farm with house in backround and van in driveway.
Photo Credit: Chris Novellino

Each cow on the farm eats about 100 pounds of food each day and drinks about 1-2 bathtubs of water a day. The farm is dependent on outside feed sources which come at a high cost. They even are required by law to seek consultation from a nutritionist to make sure the cows are getting the proper nutrition- they eat such things as corn, cotton, seed and alfalfa.

In order to get milk from a cow it must be pregnant. The cow grows the baby for 7 months while getting milk and then the last two months it is dry (no milking-save the milk for the baby). The calves are sent to another facility to be raised. You do not want to be the last owner of a cow so you look at cows feed intake and milk production and if you are losing money you sell the cow for beef. The cows actually learn how to stand in the automatic milker. They are milked twice a day. The average milk a cows gives a day is 75 gallons and it can go as high as 120 gallons.
Cows at the Zlystra Farm
Photo Credit: Chris Novellino

The farm can have a negative effect on the environment in a few ways. First, the silage pile, the pile of hay that the farmer has on the property for the cows to supplement with their other feeds sources, gives off VOCs (volatile organic compounds); only a portion of the pile can be exposed at a time. Of course methane is released into the atmosphere from the cows and ammonium nitrate from cow urine is released into the groundwater.

Overall, it was interesting to see how a dairy farm works up close and personal, smell and all.

On the morning of June 25, we went for a tour of the Hilmar Cheese Company right down the road from the dairy farm. The company is the world’s largest wholesale cheese farm; it creates over 1.5 million pounds of cheese a day.

The one cool thing about this company is that it uses a recycling process with its products. The cows give milk which is curds and weigh. The curds make the cheese and the whey protein is made into whey protein and lactose. The water used to clean the plant is sent to a water reclamation facility which then can be used to water the crops that feed the cows.


Cows form the methane digester and cheese farm.
Photo Credit: Trish Seelman

Natural Resources- Uranium Mine- Moab, Utah

On our way back to our campsite after going to Canyonlands National Park near Moab, Utah on July 1 we stopped at a uranium mine. Uranium was extracted from the mine from 1962- 1984 until in it was taken over by the Department of Energy. The Department of Energy put 720 million dollars  into the building of a new rail line to move the radioactive waste to secure locations. The site is listed under RCRA to make sure the public would not have a say in what was done with the site.

Sign outside of mine.


Uranium has a half-life of 700 million years and its alpha particles are blocked by the screen .Even so it is still concerning thought because the works removing the waste at the mine do not wear protective clothing.

The mine is a concern to us on the trip because it is right next to the Colorado River. A burm was created to prevent flooding into the site but some of the radioactive material still who knows might have leached into the water.

Vocab word of the day:
Tailing- any rock material that you have extracted all the usefulness from it.

Natural Resources- Open-Pit Copper Mine- Salt Lake, Utah

While in Salt Lake City Utah on June 12 on our way to Antelope Island we stopped by the largest open pit mine in the world. It is called the Bingham Canyon Mine and is still in operation today. It was discovered in 1848 by Sanford and Thomas Bingham followers of Joseph Bingham.

The mine is a copper mine and is ¾ miles deep and 2 ½ miles long.
That means it is 3960 feet deep and 13,200 feet long.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Water in the West- Lake Tahoe- Nevada

We were unable to visit Lake Tahoe when we were in Reno, Nevada on June 28 but I will tell you a little about the Lake. Lake Tahoe is the oldest lake in Norht America being 4-5 million years old.


It is easy to see why people vacation here.

Lake Tahoe is the second deepest freshwater lake in the United States-1,685 feet deep (second to Crater Lake in Oregon). The lake is 22 miles long and 22 miles wide. It is located along the border of California and Nevada west of Carson City, NV. The lake is a major tourist attraction- home to ski resorts and of course summer recreation activites- boating, fishing, swimming, canoeing etc.

The water quality in the lake has been decreasing since the 1980s. The lake is becoming increasingly eutrophic ( having an excessive richness of nutrients).The water clarity is decreasing at an average rate of 0.25 meters a year and the priamry producation fo the lake is increasing by 5% annually. The eutrophication is mainly due to the runoff coming from homes and streets, casinos, golf courses, and septic systems and the lake has lost adjacent marshes  that would filter than runoff because of increased development.


Water in the West- Hetch Hetchy Reservoir- California

We visited the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir on June 27, it is winthin Yosemite National Park. Becasue Hetch Hetcy is a municipal water supply and the water is not filterd (the Tuloumne is a protected watershed) swimming and boating are prohibited. Fishing is pemirtted formt he lake shore.

The Reservoir, harming wilderness? what! Isn't it beautiful.
Photo Credit: Eric Robinson
The reservoir holds 360,000 million acre feet of water, very small compared to Lake Powell and Mead.
The O'Shaughnessy Dam 364 feet talls form the reservoir and is gravity fed. There was a long battle against the dam, led by famous John Muir.

O'Shaunghnessy Dam.
Photo Credit: Eric Robinson

The Raker Act signed by President Woodrow Wilson in 1913 allowed San Francisco to buy the rights to the Tuolomne River and begin construciton of the dam that wasn't complete till 1923.  Wait when did San Francisco get invovled? The primary purpose of the dam was to supply fresh drinking water to the San Fran. Bay Area.  Hethc Hethcy holds 25 % of the cities water supply.

Hydroelectric power is also produced from the dam by the  Moccasin Powerhouse, which has a capacity of 100 megawatts. We had a tour of the Moccasin faciliy by Dr. Bruce McGurk.


San Francisco Public Utilites Comission Water System Hetch Hetchy to San Fran.

Water in the West- Federal Water Projects- California


This map nicely shows all the federal water projects in California.

There is the Central Valley Project:
Orginallly, a state project but had to become federal ( under the Bureau of  Reclamation) because in 1933 the state had no money to build such a water system during the Great Depression. The project has 13 million acre feet of storage capacity and produces 1, 880 megawats of electricity.

The CVP would transport water to the arid Central Valley of California via canals, aqueducts and pump plants- some shared with the California State Water Project. The once water-poor San Joaquin Valley is now productive farmland.

Coachella Canal:
This is a 122 mile aqueduct that take water fomr the Colorao River from the All-American Dam to the Coachella Vally in Riverside County, CA- where it is used for irrigation. Construction began in the 1930s but was interrupted by WWII and then resumed after the war and was completed in 1949. The Coachella Canal has a capacity of
39.2 million acre-feet.

All-American Canal:
This is a 80 mile aqueduct in the southeast of California. It transports water from the Colorado River to the Imperial Valley and nine cities. It is the valleys only water source.

The Imperial Dam diverts water into the All-American Canal  and has made farming possible in this semi-arid place. The Imperial Irrigation discuss manages the water that runs out of the Canal and is resonsible for delivering  3.1 million acre feet of water to the valley. 








Water in the West- California State Water Project

California State Water Project:
More than 2/3 of the people in California receive part of their water from the California State Water Project. The project was built and is operated by the Department of Water Resources and was started in 1960. It was built from north to south beginning with the Oroville Dam, the tallest dam in the U.S. (770 feet tall)

Parts of the state get over 100 inches while other parts get 2 inches, and most of the growth occurs in the more arid parts of the state. Water from the Sierra Nevada Mountains and the Colorado River is pumped to growing cities such as San Francisco and Los Angeles.

The Central State Water Project spans over 600 miles of California- it has 34 storage facilities, 20 pumping stations, four pumping-generating plants, five hydroelectric plants and approximately 700 miles of pipelines, canals and tunnels. 70% of the water is used for urban uses and the other 30% agricultural uses.


Water in the West- Central Arizona Project

The Central Arizona Project diverst 1.5 million acre feet from the Colorado River at Lake Havasu and directs in to Pima, Pinal, Maricopa counties and inclduing the Phoneix and Tuscon metropolitan areas.
The CAP was created by the Colorado River Basin Project Act of 1968 whihc was signed by President Lyndon. B Johnson. The Central Arizona Porject consists of 336 miles of aqueducts, tunnels, pumping plants and pipelines.

Water in the West- San Luis Reservoir and O'Neill Forebay- California

Nestled in the grassy hills of the western San Joaquin Valley near historic Pacheco Pass  (windiest road in America), San Luis Reservoir State Recreation Area.


San Luis Reservoir.

After hectic driving from the Channel Islands we arrived at the reservoir after midnight on June 23; the stars at the resevoir were incredible.The next day we stopped by the resevoir and had a discussion about it.


The San Luis Resevoir has 2, 040,000 million acre feet of storage and is the largest off stream reservoir in the United States. San Luis Reservoir was constructed as a storage reservoir for the federal Central Valley Project and the California State Water Project. It stores runoff water from the San Joaquin-Sacramento River Delta that would otherwise flow into the  Pacific ocean. The water arrives through the California Aqueduct and the Delta-Mendota Canal to the O- Neill Forebay.

San Luis Reservoir and O'Neill Forebay serve as the upper and lower reservoirs for the Gianelli Hydroelectric plant, whihc began operation in 1968. The plant has eight turbines that pruce a comibed 424 megawatts electricity. During non peak electricity times when cost is low, water is pumped fomr the Forebay to the Reservoir and then during the day is released through the San Luis Dam thus creating hydropower that you now can sell.


Water in the West- California State University

Early evening on June 20, we stopped at the University of California in Fullerton, CA and had a discussion there with Harmone Hawley, Ph.D about water and air qualtitles issues on the West Coast. The talk mainly concentrated on Orange County in California near Los Angeles and the MWD or Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.


Map of MWD of California.

This water district delivers over 1.7 billion gallons of water daily to an area of about 5,200 square feet. That is over 19 million people in Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, Riverside,San Bernardino, and Ventura counties.

Orange County itself gets half of it water from local sources and then the other half from Northern Calfornia and the Colorado River. Orange County also does not operate its water basin in a safe yield mode. They pump as much groundwater as they need from the basin ata time and average its use over a few years. As a consequence, the ground as been sinking from the overpumping.


Sinkholes can occur after overpumping.

Another concern in Orange County is salt water intrusion. They have one of the most aggressive prevention systems in the country- this includes the Alamintos and Talbert Gap. There is also a desalination plant near Santa Barbara, CA but it is too exensive still to put into use yet.

On to air quality, Los Angeles is the direst city concerning ozone in the United States. Just being near it for the short time we were for the talk at the University, my throat hurt fomr the air pollution. The amount of automobiles in the city are to blame- pushing the PM 2.5 and PM 10 through the roof. Particle matter 2.5 is inhalable (the one to be more concerned about) and Particle matter 10 gets caught in your mucus in your lungs. Los Angele's situation is partly to blmae for it location; the city if located in a valley so all the pollution is trapped there. The CA-ARB, California Air Resources Board has been monitoring the citie's air quality since the 1970s.


Los Angeles' location is partly to blame for the air qualtiy.

Water in the West- Hoover Dam

We drove by the Hoover Dam on June 19. I only saw the dam from the road, but we stopped by and took pictures at Lake Mead.  Lake Mead is the largest man-made resevoir in the United States. It can hold about 28.5 million acre feet of water.


Lake Mead.


Aerial view of Lake Mead and Hoover Dam.

The Hoover Dam was built between 1931 and 1935 during the Great Depression. Thousands of workers' hard work was put into the dam and many workers died as well (no bodies as we know of buried within dam). The dam is controversially named after Presidnet Herbert Hoover.


The inner workings of the dam.

Tha dam is located on the border between Nevada and Arizona (gives power to NV, AZ, and CA). It has a maximum production of 2,080 megawatts of electricity with its 17 generators.

The massive Hoover Dam.


Water in the West-Glen Canyon Dam/Lake Powell/Horseshoe Bend

We stayed the night of June 15 at the Wahweap Campgorund, downstream of Glen Canyon Dam. Our camp was right next to the Dam’s reservoir- Lake Powell-which holds 24.3 million acre feet of water.
Lake Powell.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire

It felt so good to swim in the reservoir which felt like a natural lake and looked like a lake (it was complete with houseboats on it). The night at Lake Powell the sunset and the moon rose orange at the same time- it was a beautiful sight to behold.
Sunset at Glen Canyon Recreation Area.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire

The next morning we did not know if it was Mountain or Pacific Time (half of the recreation area is in Utah and the other half in Arizona) so we showed up one hour early for our tour of the Glen Canyon Dam. They had a very extensive visitor center so we kept ourselves busy. 
Rachel became a junior ranger while we waited for our tour!
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire


The official sign.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire


Our tour guide was Curtis and he was very enthusiastic. The Dam was built by the Bureau of Reclamation part of the Department of Interior. It took 400,000 buckets to complete the project in September 1963; that is enough concrete to make a four lane highway from Phoenix, Arizona to Chicago, Illinois. One can see 583 feet of the dam but it is truly 720 feet tall.

View from the top of the dam.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire

Glen Canyon Dam has eight generators that produce electrical current at 13,800 volts each aka 1.3 million kilowatts of power. Hydropower is 85% efficient compared to coal that is 50% efficient.

Turbines of the dam.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire

While at the dam we also had a ranger talk, her name was Katie. She brought to our attention about hidden water in the cloths we buy and food we eat.
In food: one hamburger- 708 gallons
Pair of jeans: 100 gallons
In electricity- one hour of watching TV is 10 gallons
 So how many jeans do you have in your closet?


Contemplating life at the Bend.
Photo Credit: Kristen Meidt

After our tour and discussions at dam, we headed to good old Wal-Mart to stock up on food for our trek down to the bottom of the Grand Canyon. Then we went for lunch at Horseshoe Bend, a lovely geological feature carved out of the canyon rock by the Colorado River located in Page, Arizona.

Horseshoe Bend.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire









Diagram of a dam that produces hydropower.












Water in the West- Salt Lake City, Utah

At Antelope Island, the morning of June 13 on our way to Bryce Canyon – the South end of Salt Lake.

The Great Salt Lake in all her glory.


The Great Salt Lake is the largest U.S. lake located west of the Mississippi River. It was once called Bonneville Lake -14,000-30,000 years ago. The lake was 131 miles by 131 miles. Yearly, 2.9 million acre feet evaporate from Salt Lake and 2.2 million metric tons of minerals enter. The salinity of the Lake varies from 5%-30%. The salinity of the Dead Sea is close to 30%.
           
 In the 1800s, a railroad divided Salt Lake into a North and South end- it did not allow water flow between the two ends and we see the effects of that now. The South side has a higher level of water and a lower salinity because fresh water enters the Lake. The North end which does not have water entering from another body of water it has a higher salinity.

The Lake has many uses:
The salt in the Lake is used to make salt licks for cattle and other livestock. The salt is also used in hydrochloric acid, fertilizers and chlorine gas. There is an industry in the collecting the shrimp to feed fish. Millions of birds feed on the shrimp. It is too expensive to make table salt out of the Lake and recently there has been oil discovered under the Lake- but that would disrupt the ecosystem of the Lake and cause pollution as well so the oil has not been excavated yet.


Water in the West- Colorado River Compactt/Flaming Gorge, Utah.

The Colorado River, is the most litigated river in the world and it is only 1450 miles long. (The Mississippi is over 2,000 miles long and the Nile and Amazon are over 4,000 miles long.)

The Colorado River Basin Compact is divided like this:

Upper Basin States Allocations:
Colorado 3.88 million acre feet
Utah 1.73 million acre feet
New Mexico 0.84 million acre feet
Wyoming 1.05 million acre feet

Lower Basin State Allocations:
California 4.4 million acre feet
Arizona 2.8 million acre feet
Nevada 0.7 million acre feet

To get the water to the states dams had to be built along the Colorado River. There are two reasons to build dams for hydropower and of course for their reservoirs which people can slowly release water when they need it in droughts.

We camped next to the reservoir of the Flaming Gorge Dam in Utah (very close to the border of Wyoming) the night of June 11. Flaming Gorge has 3.78 million acre feet of water storage and generates 150 megawatts
of activity.

Unloading the vans at the campsite.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire


Resevoir, mountains and campsite.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire


Resevoir, mountains and beautiful rocks.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire


Sunset at Flaming Gorge campground.
Photo Credit: Erin Maguire

  Other major dams along the river are the Glen Canyon Dam and Lake Powell its reservoir, Hoover Dam and its reservoir Lake Mead, the Davis Dam and its reservoir Lake Havasu and the Parker and Imperial Dams.On our journey, we will camp next to Lake Powell and take a tour of Glen Canyon Dam and we will stop by and talk about the Hoover Dam.