Archive for » April, 2010 «

Very Important and Vital News from Oregon Wild

As an Oregonian, I feel honored and blessed to be surrounded by such beauty and wonders as abound in the forests and wilderness of the Oregon Wilds. Clean, green, and beautiful. There is nothing I enjoy more than getting out and hiking to a lovely waterfall, or finding back trails to some fantastic and lovely water holes to cool off in the summer time. The tall green forests always feel so magical and special, and wildlife is abundant in a way the creators meant this planet to be.

Surely others feel the wonderful bond we humans have to nature, and can understand the integral part they play in Life on this beautiful planet Earth? We are conscious stewards who must remember to walk softly, with a great respect for these sacred lands. Because truly, all places on this planet are sacred, and we can each make a difference when it comes to preserving the pristine wild places. Please take a few precious moments to offer your support in caring for the land which provides for all of our needs. The following letter is the latest news from Oregon Wild. I give grateful thanks for your time.

Oregon Wild Supporter,

Here’s a quick quiz for you:

The Malheur, Wallowa-Whitman, and Umatilla Nation Forests in northeast Oregon cover 5.3 million acres of land. In the new draft Forest Service plan that will chart the course for their future management, how many acres of Wilderness is the agency recommending?

a)    1,800,000 acres
b)    953,000 acres
c)    16,000 acres

Click here to find out the answer and make sure your voice is heard as the Forest Service continues to draft their new plan.

Collectively, these national forests make up the spectacular and diverse Blue Mountains where Ponderosa pine forests and sweeping vistas are home to elk, steelhead, and now wolves. Out here, the forests are more open and the chance of running into another person out in the backcountry is slim.

The opportunities for expanded Wilderness protection are vast.

With only 4% of the state of Oregon permanently safeguarded with the highest level of protection Congress can bestow on public land, we have a long way to go to make up our Wilderness deficit. Sadly, the Forest Service (even with new leadership in the Obama administration) doesn’t seem to understand how vital Wilderness protections are to Oregonians today and for future generations.

Click on the chart below to see the numbers and find out what the Forest Service is recommending for Wilderness protection in the Blue Mountains Forest Plan Revisions.

From Hell’s Canyon west to the headwaters of the John Day River, the national forests that make up the mighty Blue Mountains need your voice.

Write to the Forest Service today and urge them to protect the remaining wild places of northeast Oregon.

Thank you.

For the wild,
Erik Fernandez
Wilderness Coordinator
Oregon Wild

PS: The Forest Service doesn’t always move quickly. The Blue Mountains Forest Plan Revision has been years in the making. Throughout the process, Oregon Wild staff have been diligently monitoring the process, attending meetings, and now holding the Forest Service accountable for a lackluster plan. We couldn’t keep the Forest Service honest without the support of people like you. Please donate or become a member today to support our work protecting our remaining wild forests. Thanks.


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Wolf Killers in Southwest driving Wolves to Extinction

America's WolvesThe fight to save the wolves in the Southwest of America and Mexico is desperate but we are not giving up, not by a long shot. Although the population has reached near extinction, with just 42 lobo’s in existence, and only two mating pairs left in the wild, we can do the impossible and give them the protection they need to survive. It is critical to take action now to save these rare wolves from the unthinkable. Please look into your hearts and do what you can to ensure a future for the lobos of the pacific Southwest.

Check out the latest news on these beautiful and rare creatures, as passed along from Save America’s Wolves at Defenders of Wildlife.

Dear Teri,

First she was shot.

Then the body of this highly endangered wolf was dumped — like a sack of garbage — along the side of the road.

To scientists she was F386, a five-year-old female that represented hope for her struggling species.

To us, she was a beautiful animal who deserved the right to live in the wilds of America’s Southwest, where these wolves once thrived.

This terrible killing underscores the growing mindless hatred threatening Mexican wolves — or lobos the rarest wolves in the world.

Please donate today to help catch the wolf haters who are stalking and killing lobos and put in place a protective recovery program for the most endangered wolves in the world.

Decades of trapping, shooting and poisoning exterminated lobos from the wild. In 1998, wild wolves returned to the Southwest — but more than a decade later, their lives are in grave danger.

Criminal wolf killers, mismanagement and a venomous anti-wolf movement have caused the Mexican wolf population to plummet to just 42 putting these rare animals at risk of a second extinction in the wild.

Please stand with us today and give these wolves a fighting chance through your tax-deductible donation.

The bottom line is that lobos will not survive the fierce onslaught of these extremists without our immediate action. Your contribution will help Defenders…

  • Post rewards to help law enforcement capture and put these lawless wolf killers behind bars.
  • Push Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to fast-track a science-based plan for restoring lobos to their rightful home in the Southwest. Already, nearly 53,000 Defenders activists like you have sent messages to Secretary Salazar urging immediate action, including thousands of wolf supporters living in Arizona and New Mexico.
  • Counter the hate-filled propaganda of extremists through an aggressive public education campaign.
  • Use proven on-the-ground techniques to keep wolves away from livestock and away from those who would harm them.

Please donate now to help save the last 42 wild lobos and other wildlife struggling to survive.

The plight of lobos is desperate. Only two breeding pairs are left in the wild as these wolves struggle to survive — including the mother and father of the Middle Fork pack who have each lost a leg to a painful human-made trap and gunshot wound.

State officials have twice targeted this three-legged pair for removal from the wild. Defenders is again working on the ground to ensure these wolves stay out of harm’s way.

The fight to save these magnificent wolves from a second extinction in the wild will be tough, but with your help, I know we can succeed for them.

Rodger Schlickeisen
Save something wild,
Rodger Schlickeisen, President Signature
Rodger Schlickeisen
President
Defenders of Wildlife

 

P.S.  Wolf-haters are stalking the last 42 Southwest wolves in the wild.  Help us put wolf killers behind bars and secure protection for these beautiful animals with your secure online donation or call 1-800-385-9712 to donate by phone.


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Protection of the Wilderness in Oregon’s Yellowstone

Oregon's WildernessI ran across an interesting article at The Stump which points out some important facts about what is happening in Oregon’s wilderness today. Although we have come a long way, and truly done an outstanding job in protecting our beautiful and pristine wild areas here in Oregon, there remains a very real threat to our unique wilderness areas. Please take a few precious moments to look at the following article.

Wilderness protection for Oregon’s Yellowstone

By Guest Columnist
April 19, 2010, 7:00AM
By Erik Fernandez

The Siskiyou Wild Rivers area in southwest Oregon is one of the most important and unique natural areas in the state. Sadly, as The Oregonian editorial board recently pointed out it’s also one of the most threatened.

As the largest, most intact and most biologically diverse wild area in the state, the Siskiyous are Oregon’s very own Yellowstone. Known historically for healthy salmon runs, the region is gaining an unfortunate reputation of late for anything-goes mining. Congress and the Obama administration need to act to ensure that this natural treasure receives the protection it deserves.

Southwest Oregon has a history of mineral extraction, but we need to ask ourselves if harmful mining should take place in one of the most sensitive natural areas in Oregon. Should diesel-powered suction dredges be set loose to excavate critical spawning habitat for steelhead and chinook and coho salmon?

This isn’t the first time this corner of our state faced threats from harmful extractive industries. And those who care about clean water, wildlife and quiet recreation haven’t always been able to beat back misguided schemes.

In 1994 Congress green-lighted logging without laws with the infamous “salvage rider.” When President Bill Clinton signed the salvage rider, many acres of ancient forest in the Siskiyou Wild Rivers were toppled by chainsaws. After the Biscuit Fire of 2002, the Bush administration proposed the single largest logging project in Forest Service history.

Today, the area faces threats both new and old. No doubt, until Oregon’sYellowstone is permanently protected, private special interests will always work to reap a profit from these public lands. That’s why Congress should pass Wilderness and Wild & Scenic Rivers legislation for the Siskiyou Wild Rivers. Wilderness designation remains the surest and most lasting way to ensure no further harm comes to this internationally significant landscape.

While Oregon has a green reputation, we don’t always live up to it. Nowhere is that more true than when it comes to protecting our natural legacy. Sadly, only 4 percent of the entire state has been permanently protected as wilderness, compared to 10 percent in Washington, 15 percent in California and 8 percent in conservative Idaho.

Protecting Oregon’s Yellowstone as wilderness would safeguard amazing salmon runs in the Chetco River, the unparalleled wildflower diversity of Rough and Ready Creek, and the only redwoods in Oregon that grow to a massive 15 feet in diameter.

Luckily, momentum is already building. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, along with Rep. Peter DeFazio and Gov. Ted Kulongoski have all called for increased protections for this area. In the short term, the Siskiyou Wild Rivers need an immediate timeout on mining so that Congress can address the broader need for wilderness protections. The Obama administration could easily and quickly enforce a mining timeout through an administrative withdrawal for the threatened wilderness areas.

While a timeout on destructive plans for this unique region is certainly necessary, it is but a short-term fix. For the salmon that swim its wild rivers, the rare flowers that bloom only from its unique soils and the many thousands who camp, fish and hike along its trails, wilderness is the long-term solution for the Siskiyou Wild Rivers.

Erik Fernandez is the wilderness coordinator for Oregon Wild.


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International Day of Peasant Struggle on April 17th 2010

Dear readers,

Please take a few moments to educate yourself on this very important matter. As free citizens on this planet Earth, we all have the sovereign right to live and grow our own food to ensure the healthy survival of our families. Let’s take action, and hug a farmer today!

To commemorate the International Day of Peasant Struggle on April 17th 2010, the international peasant movement La Via Campesina calls upon member organizations, allies and supporters to unite against global agribusiness corporations, which seek complete control over food and agriculture systems around the world. Small and family scale farmers form the backbone of the global food supply and are essential for transitioning to a healthy and organic food system.

On April 17th 1996, nineteen landless Brazilian peasants who were defending their right to produce food by demanding access to land were massacred by the military police. Since the massacre at El Dorado dos Carajás, every year on this date actions are organized around the world by farmers’ organizations, communities, student groups, non-governmental organizations and activists, in order to demand food sovereignty and peasants’ rights to produce food.

Join Via Campesina and the Organic Consumers Association in the global struggle against multinational corporations, like Monsanto, that are threatening our food supply and undermining farmers across the globe. Visit OCA’s Millions Against Monsanto campaign center for more information.

To join the April 17, 2010 Day of Peasant Struggle, go to: viacampesina.org


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