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Conservation in the Age of Consequences

Conservation in the Age of Consequences


Originally published in the Winter 2008 (Vol. 48, No. 1) edition of the Natural Resources Journal, published by the University of New Mexico School of Law.

Excerpt:
"In June 2006, 49 heifers were delivered to The Quivira Coalition's ranch on the 36,000-acre Valle Grande allotment on the Santa Fe National Forest atop Rowe Mesa, southwest of Santa Fe, New Mexico. They were the first installment of what would become a 124-head herd of heifers, plus three Corriente bulls, all under our "Valle Grande" brand, and all under our management. And just like that, a bunch of conservationists became ranchers.

"This was an intriguing turn-of-events for the staff and Board of The Quivira Coalition, a nonprofit whose original mission was to create common ground between ranchers and environmentalists. It was also a surprising twist for me personally. If ten years ago you had told this former Sierra Club activist that I would be in the livestock business, selling local beef to Santa Fe residents, I simply would not have believed you. But here I am--a dues-paying member of the New Mexico Cattlegrowers' Association.

"Maybe it was not such a stretch. After ten years of encouraging ranchers to act more like conservationists it suddenly seemed logical that we, as a conservation organization, begin to act more like ranchers. It was not just a matter of 'walking the talk' either--the harder we looked, the more conservation opportunities we saw running the ranch as a ranch. In fact, when discussing this turn of events in my lectures around the region today, I state simply that The Quivira Coalition is 'a conservation organization that manages livestock for land health and prosperity.' Obviously, this is something new under the sun. But what exactly?"

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