Outside Online
advertisement
  • Home
  • Travel
  • Gear
  • Bodywork
  • Culture
  • Blog
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Photos
  • Archives
  • Subscribe
Subscribe to Outside Magazine


You Are Here:   Home  >>   Outside Online Archives

Outside Blog
  • Bike 1, Cop 0
  • Vuelta a Espana: Rest Day 1 Wrap
  • In-Convention Truth: It's Over
  • The Spoke Word: Who's Riding What Now?
  • In-Convention Truth: The Fittest ...
Podcasts
  • Q&A: Climbing El Capitan with Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin, and Ivo Ninov listen
  • Q&A: Maggie Anthony On Son Eric Volz listen
  • Q&A: Photographer Danny Clinch listen
  • Q&A: "Coca Is It!" Author Joshua Hammer listen
  • Q&A: "Strange Bird" Author Carl Hoffman listen
  • Out of Bounds: That '70s Guy listen
Videos
  • Jack Johnson Cover Shoot
  • Grand Canyon: 3D IMAX
  • Climbing El Capitan
  • Castaway:
  • Episode 1: The Arrival
  • Episode 2: The Quest for Fire
  • Episode 3: Mmm...Slime Nuggets
  • Episode 4: "Last Night, a Crab Tried to Eat Me."
Ask Dave
  • What kind of dog will make me look manlier? answer
  • Is there a sport that safely combines my twin passions for guns and kayaks? answer
  • How come most of the world's cultures enjoy eating goat, but Americans don't? answer
The Wild File
  • Why do mosquito bites itch? answer
  • Are elite athletes just lucky genetic mutants? answer
  • Can women really tolerate cold water better than men? answer

Online Favorites

  • "Into Thin Air"
  • Best Adventure Books
  • The O Files: Unsolved Mysteries
  • Dream Towns
  • Dream Jobs

Special Issues

  • Family Road Trips
  • Interactive Colorado
  • Literary All-Stars
  • Adventure Lodges
  • Oceanic Endeavors
  • Adventure Goddesses

Photo Galleries

  • Mark Jenkins in Tibet
  • Syria
  • Bhutan
  • Women Who Rock
  • Kelly Slater
  • Olympic Cities
  • Exposure: Sara Carlson
  • See All Galleries
share this article del.icio.us DIGG Facebook StumbleUpon


Dispatches, February 1999

Wilderness

A Desert Defiled
Is America's park system in trouble? In the Mojave, an unsettling answer.

By Jon Christensen


Out on the barrens of southeastern California, where Interstate 40 cuts through seemingly endless ranks of barrel cactus and creosote bushes beneath a bleached blue sky, there's a large white billboard standing next to the highway emblazoned with the words: "Available for Sale or Development." Glance to the right of this advertisement and you will spy, planted along a dirt road about 150 feet away, a small brown sign paradoxically referring to the same patch of desert. It reads simply, and with bewildering incongruity, "Mojave National Preserve."

Welcome to ground zero of America's undeclared war on its park system. Inside Mojave's austere, 1.6-million-acre preserve — which happens to be the National Park Service's third-largest parcel in the Lower 48 — lies an area more than twice the size of Washington, D.C., that is owned by the Catellus Development Corporation. A real-estate spin-off of the Santa Fe Pacific Railroad, Catellus controls one of the largest land portfolios in the West. And although this particular 134-square-mile swatch sits directly in the heart of an area that the Park Service is charged, by law, to protect in a manner that will leave it "unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations," the land has been up for sale to the highest bidder since 1996. The prospect of blacktop, cookie-cutter housing, and permits for motorized access has piqued the interest of developers — and provoked the despair of those who consider this wilderness inviolable. "We can't put our guard down for one day because we might lose this wonderful resource," says Norbert Riedy, 41, a conservation director with the Wilderness Society and a desert rat who knows every canyon and crossroads in the area. "What's at stake is the future of Mojave."

The Catellus situation is but one of nearly a dozen ventures driven by urban expansion and industrial-scale tourism that, along with traditional claims upon the land by miners and ranchers, now menace Mojave. These threats, moreover, make the preserve an archetype of the chokehold currently throttling many of the 378 parks, monuments, and other parcels managed on behalf of the American public by the Park Service. "Mojave doesn't have all the problems, but it has darned near all of them," says Hal Rothman, a University of Nevada historian and author of Devil's Bargains: Tourism in the Twentieth-Century American West, published last October. "Internally and externally, these places are under threat like never before."

If Mojave offers any guide, the picture seems bleak indeed. Directly to the north of the preserve, a coterie of Las Vegas real-estate developers has submitted plans for a subdivision with several hundred homes, a lighted golf course, and an RV park. Just beyond that, the U.S. Army wants to expand its tank-testing range at Fort Irwin by an additional 193,000 acres, even though armored maneuvers have already left indelible tracks across more than 1,000 square miles of fragile desert while kicking up more particulate air pollution than any other single source in this part of the southwest.

Meanwhile, 15 miles east of the park, a casino and shopping mall are sucking up scarce groundwater. Another 15 miles beyond this complex, officials in Clark County, Nevada, are hoping, despite the failure of a recent congressional appropriations bill, to build a new airport for Las Vegas whose flight path would bring approaching jets directly over the preserve. And four miles to the north lies the largest toxic polluter in southern California, a mine where Molycorp extracts lanthanide (a compound used in phosphorescent tubes and computer screens). When a wastewater pipe burst in 1996, 200 gallons of radioactive effluvium spilled into the preserve, contaminating a portion of habitat critical to the endangered desert tortoise.

The preserve is also besieged internally by the demands of more than 1,000 mining claims and 175,000 acres of private inholdings. For example, at the Cima Cinder Cones, a group of lunarlike rocks that were declared a National Natural Landmark in 1973, the operators of one of the largest active mines in the park system has been hauling off 7,000 tons of volcanic rock each year and selling it as building blocks in Needles, California. "There are all the external threats, and then there's a host of activities inside that are tremendous problems," says Mojave's former assistant superintendent, Frank Buono, who retired in 1995. "The Park Service style of management has been to look the other way on all issues that might engender controversy. It's management by acquiescence, management by neglect."

As disturbing as this may be, the same threats that loom over the Mojave are chipping relentlessly at the edges of numerous other areas under the control of the increasingly understaffed and underfunded National Park Service. Some problems are well documented, such as the one at the Grand Canyon, whose managers are proposing to deal with its ever-increasing traffic (10 million visitors a year are expected by 2015) by constructing a "village" on the south rim that will offer more than 1,000 hotel rooms, as well as retail outlets and restaurants. Other cases are a bit more obscure: In New Mexico, a road is being built through Petroglyph National Monument to provide access to a new Albuquerque suburb; outside Joshua Tree, developers are lobbying to construct what could become the world's largest landfill; and in Florida, Miami wants to build an expanded airport on the threshold of Everglades/Big Cypress. Perhaps the clearest indication that the situation has reached critical mass is the fact that this April the National Parks and Conservation Association will, for the first time, present to Congress a list of the 10 most "imperiled" parcels in the park system and propose solutions for each. "If we neglect these problems," says NPCA spokesperson Jerome Uher, "they'll cost even more later."

In this context, however, it is interesting to note that Mojave, while offering one of the worst examples, may also point to a way out. Last December, Riedy was pleased to report news of the sort of deal that is becoming increasingly common in these instances. California's Wildlands Conservancy announced that it was brokering a $52 million acquisition in which the Catellus land, together with an additional 381,000 acres of inholdings in federal land from Joshua Tree to the Kelso Dunes, would be purchased and turned over to the Park Service and the BLM. Although the deal still hinges on congressional budgetary approval this fall, Riedy and others are understandably heartened by the buyout. "This is a very hopeful sign," he says. "Nothing is permanently saved. But an offer like this restores my faith that maybe we can protect these areas."

E A R   T O   T H E   G R O U N D
"Money well spent."

— Search and rescue coordinator Wayne Inman, commenting on five snowmobilers who, trapped by deep snow in the Deschutes National Forest just north of Oregon's Mount Bachelor and forced to spend a night in 20-degree weather, survived by burning their cash, credit cards, and wallets.

Illustration by Campbell Laird









BlogVideosPodcastsPhotos
TODAY'S NEWS UPDATE!
Bike 1, Cop 0
This July, a New York City police officer and a cyclist had an altercation of some sort. The cop claimed the man had ...

Vuelta a Espana: Rest Day 1 Wrap
Vuelta riders take a break today, along with a 300-mile transfer from Toledo to Barbastro, in the ...

More Blogs:
  • In-Convention Truth: It's Over
  • The Spoke Word: Who's Riding What Now?
  • In-Convention Truth: The Fittest ...
  • Featured Blog: Green Issues
  • Blog Home
New Gear Reviews
Our editors roll out reviews of their favorite shoes, packs, and more.
new gear video Watch

Rwanda video
Rwanda
future gear video
Future Gear
Tyler Florence video
Tyler Florence

More Videos:
  • Fittest Real Athletes
  • Malia Jones
  • Adventure Filmmaking School
  • The Ultimate Grill
  • See all Videos
Mike Rowe Speaks
Mike Rowe talks about his long strange trip to TV's dirtiest dream job.
Mike Rowe podcast Listen

Q&A: Climbing El Capitan with Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin, and Ivo Ninov
Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin, and Ivo Ninov on guiding Dave Hahn.
El Capitan podcast Listen

More Podcasts:
  • Q&A: Maggie Anthony On Son Eric Volz
  • Q&A: Photographer Danny Clinch
  • Q&A: "Coca Is It!" Author Joshua Hammer
  • Q&A: "Strange Bird" Author Carl Hoffman
  • See all Podcasts
Malia Jones photo gallery
Malia Jones
Grand Canyon photo gallery
Grand Canyon
Rwanda photo gallery
Rwanda

Burma photo gallery
Burma
Julia Mancuso photo gallery
Julia Mancuso
Amanda Beard photo gallery
A. Beard

More Photos:
  • Cousteaus
  • Cuba
  • Ski Iran
  • Submit Your Own Photo
  • See all Photos

advertisement




Subscribe to Outside Magazine!

Crocs Inspiring Soles

special featrues

Gear Spotlight: Adventure Electronics
Our esteemed Gear Guy hones in the FAQs of the digital world in this exclusive archive.
The Green Issue
Earth Day may fall in April, but global awareness should be a 365-day concern. Let us help you stay focused.




Vacation Packages

More Travel Deals
  • Mexico Vacation Packages from $505
  • Getaway in September from $151
  • End of Summer Beach Vacations from $496
  • Spend a Weekend in Vegas from $207
Sign up for our Travel Deals Newsletter


More From Outside Online

Outside August 2008

  • Best Towns
  • Jeff Lowe
  • Burma Cyclone
  • Triathlon Training

Special Issues

  • 2008 Summer Buyer's Guide
  • 2008 Winter Buyer's Guide
  • Outside Blog
  • Unsolved Mysteries

Outside July 2008

  • Andy Roddick
  • Fitness Special
  • Summer Road Trips
  • Canadian Adventures

Online Exclusives

  • Spooky Spots and Terrible Tales
  • Literary All-Stars
  • Oceanic Endeavors
  • Adventure Goddesses

Outside June 2008

  • Malia Jones
  • Weekend Escapes
  • Satellite Radio
  • Joe Papp

Online Favorites

  • Outside Gear Blog
  • Gear Guy
  • Fitness Q&A
  • Adventure Adviser

Outside May 2008

  • Anderson Cooper
  • Best Jobs 2008
  • Surf Genius
  • Russell Brice

Outside Classics

  • Into Thin Air
  • The Whale Hunters
  • Raising the Dead
  • The Long Way Home


Vacation Ideas from The Away Network

Top Active & Adventure Cities

  • Jackson, WY
  • Los Angeles, CA
  • Moab, UT
  • Oahu, HI
  • All Active & Adventure Cities

Best Beach Islands

  • British Virgin Islands
  • Cayman Islands
  • Hilton Head Island, SC
  • Sea Island, GA
  • All Beach Vacations

Family Travel Ideas

  • Budget Vacations for Families
  • Family River Adventures
  • Family Vacations for Wildlife
  • Family-Friendly Hotel Chains
  • Tropical Vacations with Kids

GORP's Summer Outdoor Guide

  • Where to Camp
  • Where to Fish
  • Where to Hike
  • Where to Raft
  • All Summer Guides

Top Ten Beach Lists

  • Top Beach Sports
  • Top American Beaches
  • Top Budget Beach Vacations
  • Top Places to Dive
  • Top Shark-Spotting

Outdoor Vacation Guides

  • Biking Guide
  • Hiking & Backpacking Guide
  • Sailing Guide
  • Skiing Guide
  • Surfing Guide

Best Family Vacations

  • Avignon, France
  • Grand Turk, Turks & Caicos
  • Lake Tahoe, NV
  • Mazatlan, Mexico
  • Zakopane, Poland

Summer Travel Guides

  • Active Travel
  • Cultural Travel
  • Outdoor Travel
  • Romantic Travel
  • All Monthly Travel Guides



  • Home |
  • Travel |
  • Gear |
  • Bodywork |
  • Culture |
  • Videos |
  • Podcasts |
  • Photos |
  • Archives |
  • Feedback |
  • RSS Feeds |
  • Subscribe to Outside Magazine |
  • Join/Login




  • About Outside |
  • Advertise |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Subscription Services |
  • Sponsorship Policy |
  • Outside Info |
  • Site Map |
  • Press Room

  • Outside Magazine Media Kit |
  • Photo Department |
  • Privacy Policy |
  • Contact Us |
  • Contributor's Guidelines

Partner Sites:
  • Away.com |
  • GORP.com |
  • Orbitz |
  • Cheaptickets |
  • ebookers |
  • HotelClub.com |
  • RatesToGo.com |
  • asia-hotels.com |
  • Outside's Go


©1994-2008 Mariah Media Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction of material from any pages without written permission is strictly prohibited.