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Hello Friends of Glen Canyon!
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I
spent a lot of time in the emerging canyons of the Glen during the past
few months and have had incredible experiences exploring places that were
thought to be lost. With the Era of Water Surplus now over and water
demand steadily growing, the future of Glen Canyon is bright. A shrunken
Lake Powell is surrendering to the natural beauty of Glen Canyon and a
healthier Colorado River.
In the future, an exposed
Glen Canyon will prevail as we
advocate for Lake Mead to become the primary storage facility for the thirsty cities of the
lower basin.
Lake Mead is enough. While reservoir levels are rising now, places like
Cathedral in the Desert are re-flooded at a rate of 6 inches a day. For
those who haven’t been able to see that Jewel of Glen Canyon, take heart--
that water will retreat back out of Lake Powell by the fall and continue
dropping through next April; Cathedral will return soon.
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Fluctuating
reservoir levels this summer will have a devastating effect on already damaged
cultural and sacred sites throughout
Glen Canyon.
We have initiated
the
Coalition for Glen Canyon to protect these
precious emerging historical, biological, scenic, and cultural
resources. The Coalition for Glen Canyon is advocating for the
Colorado River runoff to flow around Glen Canyon Dam, stopping the
destructive re-flooding of rock art, ruins, and sacred sites until the Glen Canyon
tribes are informed of the emerging cultural resources. These precious
historic and cultural sites are going under water as we speak, and we
ask your help to stop this unnecessary action.
Visit our website to learn more about what you can do and see which
organizations and businesses have already signed on to the
Coalition
for Glen Canyon.
This
is a historical time and I urge you to make the pilgrimage to Glen Canyon and Cathedral in the
Desert as soon as you can. Even if you can’t get out here until later in the
summer or fall, don’t hesitate to plan it! Water levels will have dropped back
down to current levels within six months. Go see Glen
Canyon with your own eyes, and visit our
website to see how you can help.
We need you to spread the word about
the remarkable restoration of
America’s Lost National Park: Glen Canyon.
Thank you for defending Glen Canyon.
Keep it up; we’re getting closer.
Free
the Colorado!
Christopher Peterson
Executive Director
Glen Canyon Institute
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GCIFT Update:
Our field trips have gotten off to a successful start this spring! We
had our first backpacking trip of the season last month where our group and
intrepid guides headed down to Coyote Gulch on the lower Escalante. Our next
trip this May will be heading down Coyote again with freelance photographer
Elias Butler to learn the techniques of landscape photography and the art of
capturing the beauty of the Glen on film and digital.
We still have room for trips later this year! You can
visit White Canyon, Moqui Canyon, Rainbow Bridge, or the mystical Trachyte
Canyon with our knowledgeable guides to explore the revealed canyons of the
Glen.
Click here to learn
more about our trips.
Grand Canyon in 2006
The Ultimate River Trip!
Don’t miss this opportunity
to learn about the diverse desert southwest and explore the hidden coves and
glens of the Grand. We
still have a few spots for our 2006 Grand Canyon trip. Get all the details
here!
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Upcoming Events: Thursday, May 5
Tom
McCourt, author of "White Canyon: Remembering the Little Town at the Bottom
of Lake Powell," will be speaking at the Visitor's Center in Moab, Utah on
Thursday, May 5, at 7:00pm. Tom will be showing slides and talking about his
adventures at Hite, White Canyon, and the red deserts of Southern Utah in
the 1950s.
Visitor's Center
Moab, UT
7pm Tuesday, May 31
GCI slideshow
presentation.
REI
Albuquerque, NM
7pm
Wednesday, June 1 GCI slideshow presentation
Santa Fe Baking Company
Santa Fe, NM
7pm Check out our
calendar to see all upcoming events and find out how to schedule
something in your area.
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Donate to GCI:
Your generous donations help us ensure that Glen Canyon is not forgotten again!
Support Glen Canyon today.
Donate Now!
Win a Trip to Glen Canyon!
We're giving away a trip for 2 into Glen Canyon. Just get two of your
friends to join GCI at the Individual Level or higher and we'll enter your
name into a drawing to win a trip to Glen Canyon on one of our 2006 GCIFT
trips. Get the full details
here.
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Take Action!
As the symbolic heart of the modern
Conservation Movement, the unprecedented attention for Glen Canyon is rallying canyon lovers
everywhere to take action and
get involved. Spread the word. Glen Canyon needs your help and we have an incredible opportunity to fight for a
healthy Colorado River.
Send a letter to
Congress demanding that Cathedral in the Desert,
Register Rock and Fort Moqui not be flooded again.
Download Sample Letter
And if you have not done so already, sign on to our petition to protect
Glen Canyon and
Fill Mead First!
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Forward This
On To Your Friends!
Please forward this newsletter on to
tell your friends about the current restoration of America's Lost National Park!
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Recent Photos:
Check out the latest photos
of the restoration of Glen Canyon!
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Glen Canyon's Horseshoe Bend, located just downstream from Page, provides a
spectacular view of what historical Glen Canyon was like (minus the crystal
clear river) April 2005
Photo by Christopher Peterson
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Spring floods continue to flush sediment through Davis Gulch, below LaGorce
Arch. April 2005
Photo by Christopher Peterson
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Newslinks:
Bad Projects Never Die
Ed Quillen
The Denver Post
May 3, 2005
Quillen makes the argument that there is plenty of storage on the Colorado
River, just not enough water.
Interior Secretary Settles Dispute Over Level of Lake Powell
By Bettina Boxall
Los Angeles Times
May 3, 2005
On Monday,
Interior Secretary Gale Norton ordered federal dam managers to continue
making regular water releases from Lake Powell. Although some optimistic
estimates have said that Powell’s water levels could increase as much as
50 feet, more realistic estimates from the Natural Resources Conservation
Service (USDA) indicate that the levels will only rise 25 feet and the
reservoir will peak at levels no higher than last year. This means that we
will see the floor of Cathedral in the Desert again this fall.
Wet Winter Doesn't Douse Water Wars
T.R.Reid
Washington Post
May 2, 2005
Far from celebrating this
welcome flood, though, the seven dry states that depend on the Colorado
for their water supply are engaged in yet another intractable water war.
The Return of Glen Canyon
Dan Leeth
Chicago Tribune
May 1, 2005
Times have changed. The West's lingering drought has
dropped Lake Powell more than 130 feet, and formations that have been
waterlogged for more than three decades now stand high and dry.
A Race Against
Water
Electa Draper
Denver Post
April 26, 2005
Lake Powell has yielded a track of a creature called
a Grallator, "only the second example in the West and the first ever from
the Kayenta formation"
Biologists to see if latest experiment on Colorado River helped fish
habitat
Deseret News
April 14, 2005
An experiment regarding
fluctuating flows in the Colorado River below the Glen Canyon Dam ended
last week. Now, biologists will begin collecting data to see if the
fluctuating flows actually helped the endangered humpbacked chub.
Water Wars
Nightline
April 11, 2005
GCI's Board President, Richard Ingebretsen, and Executive Director,
Christopher Peterson, appeared on Nightline to discuss the future of Glen
Canyon and the Colorado River. Follow the link above to order a copy.
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