Granite Veg Project

GraniteProjectThis sand bank doesn’t look like it has several hundred new plants, but it does.  Prior to the Grand Canyon Vegetation Restoration project this spit of sandbar was primarily Tamarisk which had overtaken the camping and recreational aspects of this unique location on the Colorado River just above a 7-8 scale rapid called Granite at mile 93.4.  A very popular large overnight camp for boaters making the 225 mile run down the Colorado River from Lee’s Ferry to Diamond Creek and beyond.  The camp and beach are also destination spots for hikers descending the very popular Hermit Trail from the south rim to the Grand Canyon and those stopping at the Monument Campground about an hour up Monument Creek to the south.

Our trip was the finale planting of nearly 500 plants where they had spent several prior trips in November and January when they removed hundreds of invasive Tamarisk.  In Feburary they transplanted about 120 Willows and Cottonwoods about 7 feet deep such that their bases were at water table depth.  Two palates of local seedlings which were greenhouse grown on the Rim and later wintered in Phoenix were helicopter onto the beach the day before we arrived for planting.  Plants included Mesquite, Hackenberry, Dactura, Bridlebush, Catspaw and several other for the riparian level plus several grasses at the water level. It wasn’t easy to keep track but I think they planted well over 700 plants in the two efforts.  After planting the most difficult of all was watering each with a 5 gallon bucket of water from the Colorado many steps below.  Ten people could get the watering job done in about a hour the first day, but by the third day it took 50% longer as fatigue set in.

HandSawPlanting took a day and a half and the next days were spent covering (camouflaging) our devastation with hand gathered mulch, stowing tools and supplies in the cache, inventorying, and mapping the site.  Plus we managed several hours each of weeding and eliminating about 200 more Tamarisk that escape the earlier eradication.  As the photo shows Tamarisk can reach a girth of greater than 6 inches in just 10 or 12 years according to the tree rings.  Sawing them off at ground level prior to herbicide treatment is no easy task with an eight inch hand saw.

A number of interesting things took place as we participated in the April venture.  A Colorado River Guides training trip came in the first day and provided us with their camp kit and food for their 20+ and our 10 volunteers.  Accompanying the guides were experts on various topics for guide education such as geology, ecology, fisheries, and more.  We were treated to a number of mini-seminars on the beach ,after dinner and breakfast, during their overnight stay.  One of the best was a professors’ 20′ sand graphic of how the Grand Canyon and Colorado River had different and separate development stages with the earliest Colorado River running eastward to the great inland sea that spanned Utah, Colorado, Wyoming and parts of Kansas.

Last HourThe Hermit Trail down to the Colorado is a formidable 10 1/2 mile hike in itself and so popular that hikers must vie for backcountry hiking permits just to stay in the remote IMG_2809campgrounds.  Out trip down not only featured the daunting one mile descent in altitude thru the eons of stratified canyon layers but we endured a Spring wind and rain storm (with short bursts of snow) that was so strong that you virtually had to “hold on” to rocks at times.  No photos of that downhill trek as it was difficult enough just to unbuckle packs to get on rain gear.  CactusHowever as all things are in the western mountains by afternoon the storm abated and we shed our rain gear and finished the descent into camp under cloudy skies.

Climbing back out to the rim is (IMO) far easier on the legs, than long steps down are on the knees.  And fortunately UP Coblesthe canyon colors and Spring flowers where showing more vibrant color contrasts.  Even without the infamous high summer temps we consumed over 3 1/2 liters of water on the exit.  On the right is near the top of the trail and said to be over 100 years old when the Union Pacific workers improved the trail for train visitors on mules to visit deep into the canyon.  Unfortunately this quality of trail doesn’t last more than a few hundred yards out of the over 10 miles.  See if this Panorama below will enlarger on your screen.GanitePanoMed