Coyote Gulch

 



















































































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  Thursday, January 11, 2007


Beaver buddy helping frogs, toads survive
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Science Blog: "The humble beaver, besides claiming a spot of honour on the Canadian nickel, is also helping fellow species survive.

"Though considered a pest because of the culvert-clogging dams it builds on streams, the beaver is an ally in conserving valuable wetland habitat for declining amphibian populations, a University of Alberta study shows.

"The study, conducted in the boreal forests of west-central Alberta, showed that frog and toad choruses are only present on streams where beaver dams are present. While surveying the calls of male frogs and toads engaged in acoustic displays for females, researchers recorded approximately 5,000 boreal chorus frogs, wood frogs and western toads at 54 beaver ponds over a two-year period. Pitfall traps on beaver ponds captured 5.7 times more newly metamorphosed wood frogs, 29 times more western toads and 24 times more boreal chorus frogs than on nearby free-flowing streams."

"colorado water"
8:32:09 PM     


Stem cell research

Daily Kos: "[President] Bush has already promised a veto, so the battle lines are drawn but this time reconfigured with the new Democratic majority in Congress. The legislation passed today by a 253-174 vote would loosen restrictions on stem cell research (with 37 Republicans voting for it). Unfortunately, the House vote doesn't constitute a veto-proof margin, but a bipartisan group of legislators are coordinating across the House and Senate to steer the issue."

"2008 pres"
8:15:53 PM     


Spiders on drugs
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Mathew Gross is pointing to a hilarious YouTube video.


8:09:25 PM     

Watson for City Council?
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Say hello to Darrell Watson. He's a candidate for Denver City Council District 8 where Elbra Wedgeworth is term limited.

His website is a bit sparse. No weblog, no email list. It's easy to navigate and donate some dough. Nice photo on the home page along with current planned event information. Welcome to the race Mr. Watson, we'll be watching.

"denver 2007"
7:07:19 PM     


? for president?

News & Observer: "North Carolina Republicans are divided over who should be their next presidential nominee, but Democrats like home boy John Edwards, according to a new poll. Edwards, the former Tar Heel senator, had the support of 29 percent of Democratic voters, according to a survey by Public Policy Polling of Raleigh. Edwards is followed by New York Sen. Hillary Clinton (16 percent) and Illinois Sen. Barack Obama (15 percent), with 40 percent saying they would support another choice.

"The former mayor of New York, Rudy Giuliani, had the support of 30 percent of GOP voters, followed by former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (29 percent), Arizona Sen. John McCain (22 percent) and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney (6 percent). The remaining 13 percent supported someone else."

"2008 pres"
6:02:37 PM     


Denver wins 2008 Democratic National Convention
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Big news for election junkies across the west. The 2008 Democratic National Convention will be held in Denver, according to the Denver Post.

For all of you movers and shakers in the Democratic Party; please put in a kind word for a press credential for the Ol' Coyote.

Update: New West: "Jubilant Colorado officials and Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean today portrayed the selection of Denver as the host city for the 2008 Democratic National Convention as a deliberate effort to capitalize on recent electoral gains in the region - and showcase what Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper called 'a different way of going about things' in the Rocky Mountain West.

"Dean, whose once-controversial '50-state strategy' was hugely vindicated in November, said in a conference call with reporters Thursday that the political opportunity Democrats see in the West was what 'tipped' the decision to Denver. New York was the other major contender."

"2008 pres"
3:26:48 PM     


DARCA: Fifth Annual Convention
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Our friends at the Ditch and Reservoir Company Alliance write, "DARCA is pleased to announce its 5th Annual Convention, 'Go With The Flow', to be held February 22-23, 2007 in Sterling, CO. We have an exciting line-up designed to appeal to ditch company shareholders, boards and staff."

"colorado water"
6:52:31 AM     


Dodd for president?

Political Wire: "News is sweeping through Connecticut Democratic circles that Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-CT) will launch his presidential campaign on the Thursday morning's Imus in the Morning radio program, carried simultaneously on MSNBC...Dodd will speak to a group of state supporters in a conference call Thursday at noon. Many despair that the campaign will require them to raise money in what feels like a hopeless bid rooted more in vanity than logic."

"2008 pres"
6:46:52 AM     


Romney for president?

Captain's Quarters: "The upcoming presidential election will hinge on the use of technology and the rapid response to potentially damaging imagery. When a video clip from Mitt Romney's debate with Ted Kennedy in 1994 got YouTubed, opening another question about his pro-life credentials, Romney turned to Glenn Reynolds and a Podcast to set the record straight."

"2008 pres"
6:35:34 AM     


Healthcare

Left in the West: "Sen. Ted Kennedy has a health care plan to offer -- a remarkably easy-to-understand one to boot: Medicare For All."

"2008 pres"
6:26:44 AM     


Longer life for Brush water wells?
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According to the Brush News-Tribune local officials are hatching a plan to extend the life of water wells in the area. From the article, "At a regular meeting of the Brush city council, councilors heard from city administrator Monty Torres and water committee member Steve Treadway on the possibility of extending the life of Brush's high quality well-fields with reverse osmosis treatment. It was noted that Julesburg and Brighton - two municipalities remarkably different in size - both operate on 100 percent reverse osmosis treatment. 'We would be blending the treated ground water with water from our well fields,' Torres noted to the council. Torres also noted in a memo to the council that the reverse osmosis treatment would extend the life of the city's well fields, lessen the impact of Colorado Energy Management's water usage and provide Brush with an emergency water supply."

"colorado water"
6:08:31 AM     


Iraq

Here's the text of President Bush's speech about his new Iraq strategy, from the Denver Post.

Andrew Sullivan: "The premise of the speech, and of the strategy, is that there is a national democratic government in Baghdad, defending itself against Jihadist attacks. The task, in the president's mind, is therefore to send more troops to defend such a government. But the reality facing us each day is a starkly different one from the scenario assumed by the president. The government of which Bush speaks, to put it bluntly, does not exist. The reality illumined by the lynching of Saddam is that the Maliki government is a front for Shiite factions and dependent for its future on Shiite death squads. U.S. support for the government is not, therefore, a defense of democracy in a unified country, whatever our intentions. It is putting the lives of American soldiers in defense of the Shiite side in an increasingly brutal civil war."

"2008 pres"
6:02:07 AM     


HB 1036:
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According to today's Summit Daily News "reg" HB 1036: Concerning Restrictions on the Ability of Governmental Bodies to Acquire Specified Water Rights through the Exercise of the Power of Eminent Domain, was introduced in the Colorado Legislature. The bill would, "Bar the state and other political subdivisions from using eminent domain to acquire appropriated water rights."

"colorado water"
5:59:25 AM     


Arkansas Valley Conduit
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Here's an update on the Arkansas Valley Conduit from the Pueblo Chieftain. They write, "Tension and frustration over a proposed $330 million drinking water pipeline surfaced Wednesday as a committee reviewed the slow progress of the project. Carl McClure, who has tried to push additional water allocations toward the Arkansas Valley Conduit, claimed his efforts have been short-circuited by other members of the Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District board and staff members. McClure is the Southeastern director from Crowley County. Meanwhile, Joe Petramala of the South Swink water district, told the advisory committee that small water users with limited budgets are becoming frustrated with the time and money being thrown at a conduit that still has no guarantee of being constructed. Finally, lobbyist Ray Kogovsek's forecast for additional funding for the project in the next year was cloudy, given uncertainty over most parts of the federal budget. There are three bills in Congress to authorize 80 percent federal funding of the conduit, and Southeastern officials will travel to Washington later this month to assess their chances for passage. One bright ray in the day was a decision later by the Arkansas Valley Roundtable to recommend approval of a $200,000 planning grant for the conduit to the Colorado Water Conservation Board...

"Minimum water needs for the Arkansas Valley Conduit could be provided through Fryingpan-Arkansas Project allocations, if certain changes in allocations are approved, according to a proposal under consideration by the Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District: A minimum of 9,367 acre-feet of water would be needed in the conduit by 2050, based on population increases projected by the state demographer; Current demand is 6,555 acre-feet; The 1979 allocation principles set aside 12 percent of allocations to communities east of Pueblo. An average of 55,000 acre-feet of imports and floodwater would yield and average 6,600 acre-feet annually; The Southeastern allocation committee in October approved a proposal to put 2.18 percent of annual allocations to the conduit; The board has not considered the proposal which would average 1,200 acre-feet; Reusable return flows, about 20 percent of the imported water, would average 1,560 acre-feet, bringing total water available near the desired 2050 goal."

"colorado water"
5:42:10 AM     


Fountain Creek lawsuit
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The Sierra Club took some shots at Colorado Springs over the city's assertions about Fountain Creek this week, according to the Pueblo Chieftain. From the article, "The Sierra Club is accusing Colorado Springs of making false and frivolous assertions to a judge regarding its case against the city over pollution in Fountain Creek. The environmental group made the accusation in a new filing to U.S. District Judge Walker Miller. He is presiding over lawsuits by the club and Pueblo County District Attorney Bill Thiebaut against the city...

"Sierra said Colorado Springs' assertions were made in a filing to the judge describing actions by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment against the city's discharges of pollution into the creek. The club told Miller that the city falsely asserted that the state agency imposed compliance orders on Colorado Springs that cover every violation for which the club is suing. The environmental group said the city's filing claimed Sierra wants the judge to order new and different relief for the same alleged violations."

"The environmental group ridiculed the city's contention that its sewage system violations are wholly past. 'That is frivolous because they have had (an additional) 19 discharges of raw sewage or nonpotable water into Fountain Creek since Sierra Club's (lawsuit) was filed' 13 months ago, the club asserted. Sierra's filing also disputed Colorado Springs' contention that its spills are like those that generally occur in any sewage system. The club contended the city's spills are different because they 'are more in number, over a greater length of time and are continuing.' Sierra and Colorado Springs don't agree even on what the Clean Water Act says. The city contends the act bars the lawsuits because the health department already has dealt with the violations. The environmental group contends the 'plain language' of the act 'specifically provides for' lawsuits of the type it filed."

"colorado water"
5:36:31 AM     


Snowpack and reservoir storage
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Here's an update on snowpack from the Greely Tribune "reg". From the article, "While the eastern half of the state continues to dig out from three major snowstorms, snow in the mountains has been about average -- which isn't all that bad. That's according to data collected by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service's automated SNOTEL -- SNOpack TELemetry -- network. That network revealed that the statewide snowpack as of Jan. 1 was 96 percent of average and was 94 percent of last year's readings on the same date. Physical readings of other snow fields in the mountains will begin at the end of this month and be conducted monthly through the first of April...

"As of the first of this year snowpack totals ranged from 128 percent of average in the South Platte River basin to a low of 77 percent in some of the southern river basins. 'The late December blizzards helped boost the South Platte and Arkansas basins to the highest statewide percentages in the state," [USDA State conservationist Allen] Green said. While those averages are high along the Front Range, snowpack averages on the Western Slope and southern part of the state are below average, he added...

"Reservoir storage statewide continues to track at below average volumes for this time of the year and ranges from a high of 108 percent in the Gunnison and Yampa/White basins and 110 percent in southern Colorado, to a low of 77 percent in the South Platte and 63 percent in the Rio Grande. Statewide, reservoir storage is 99 percent of the long-term average."

"colorado water"
5:30:48 AM     



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