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  1. Prescribed Burns Planned May 1st thru June 30th on the Baca National Wildlife Refuge, Crestone, Colorado - April, 2011

    The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has announced that they will be conducting a series of prescribed burns on the Baca National Wildlife Refuge during the period of May 1st through June 30th , 2011.   Specifically, areas along Lower Crestone Creek, Upper Willow Creek, Upper Cottonwood Creek, Upper Deadman Creek and Antelope Springs have burn prescriptions in place for this Spring and early Summer to contribute towards wildlife habitat improvement.  Fire crews from other national wildlife refuges as well as from the Rio Grande National Forest will conduct the burns.   Exact burn dates will depend on weather conditions and other prescription requirements

    Adjacent neighbors and towns should be aware of large plumes of smoke generated as a result of the prescribed burning and some  burn units have the potential to smolder for several days.  However, all burns will be monitored until they are declared completely out.  Signs will be posted along nearest major roads including Saguache County Rd. T and Colorado State Highway 17.   Any neighbors or individuals that may require special consideration or assistance in the event that unplanned smoke issues arise are encouraged to call Refuge Manager, Ron Garcia at (719) 256-5527.

    For additional information, contact the Baca National Wildlife Refuge at (719) 256-5527.

  2. United emergency services for Crestone moves closer to being created, crucial agreements are signed - April, 2011

    by Akia Tanara & Sandra Hammond

    April was a very productive and exciting month for the Formation Committee of the Crestone Emergency Services District and our community’s emergency responders. The Formation Committee completed the Service Plan, which is the document central to the formation process. The Boards of Northern Saguache County Fire Protection District (NSCFPD), Northern Saguache County Ambulance District (NSCAD) and Kundalini Fire Management (KFM) all signed agreements consenting to the formation of the new District and to the exclusion of overlapping properties within the new District boundaries. NSCFPD also agreed to a transfer of assets, including the Crestone Fire Department building and land. The Baca Grande Property Owners Association (POA) Board signed an agreement consenting to the formation of the District, consenting to include the Baca Grande properties in the District and agreeing, upon the vote of its membership,  to transfer, and/or lease certain assets.

    These four agreements state the various parties’ intentions for the creation of a new District that will unify and consolidate the POA’s Fire and Ambulance Departments, Crestone Fire Department, Kundalini Fire Management, and the local members of Saguache County Search and Rescue, although the search & rescue service will remain as an expense for the

    Sheriff’s Office and under its control.

    According to research conducted by the district formation committee, unifying our emergency services into a District will have many benefits and solve numerous problems.

    • CrESD will have governmental immunity, reducing liability to POA members.

    • Mutual aid and Intergovernmental Agreements will remain in effect.

    • The duplication of governance and administration of services will be eliminated.

    • The cost of emergency services will be more equitable through a uniform property tax. Currently, owners of undeveloped land in the Baca subsidize the cost of services to owners with developed land, as they both pay the same amount in dues per lot.

    • For the first time, the spiritual centers, Baca Meadows town houses, the Desert Sage, Colorado College and White Eagle Village will be included in an emergency service area.

    • All fire fighters will be eligible for Public Safety Officers Benefits (pension), not available to Baca Grande fire fighters because they are not part of a District.

    • Emergency dispatch services will be accessed through 911. Currently, Colorado State Patrol dispatches Baca Grande calls while the Sheriff’s Office dispatches Crestone and surrounding county calls, resulting in confusion that can delay response time.

    • Emergency communications will improve with all responders using compatible radios.

    • Emergency response vehicles and equipment will be uniformly maintained.

    • Training schedules for fire fighters, EMS and Saguache County Search & Rescue responders will be coordinated and streamlined.

    • Standardized operating guidelines will be utilized.

    • Volunteer retention will improve, which is critical to the success of volunteer emergency service departments.

    • Emergency preparedness education will be offered to increase our safety and self-reliance.

    In order for Crestone Emergency Services District (CrESD) to be finalized, many actions still need to be taken. The POA membership will have to agree to the transfer of assets. Saguache County Commissioners and the District Judge will have to approve the District Service Plan and allow this matter to go to the electors in November 2011.  Approval for the District formation must come from the voters. Following a successful election process, NSCFPD and NSCAD will need to hold public hearings on the exclusion of overlapping territories before signing resolutions to that effect.

    The District will generate funds from a uniform property tax on all properties within the service area for a total of 16 mils. The mil levy received from residents of the service area will fund the ongoing operations of CrESD, with additional funds generated from ambulance service fees, contractual agreements and grants. This mil levy will result in an increase of .489 mils for those properties currently served by Northern Saguache County Ambulance District (currently costing 7.5 mils) and the Northern Saguache County Fire Protection District (currently costing 8.011 mils). Neither the Northern Saguache County Fire Protection District nor the Northern Saguache County Ambulance District will thereafter collect any taxes from the areas now included in the new District.

    Homeowners in the new District will pay more in taxes than undeveloped lot owners, as is standard across the State, because mil levies are imposed on assessed values of properties. Many homeowners in the Baca Grande will pay an increased amount for emergency services than they currently pay through POA dues. But, all property owners in the Baca Grande will have their POA dues reduced. Based on 2011 budget levels,  the POA Board anticipates that this reduction will be approximately $55 per lot. All property owners in the CrESD service area will be eligible for a real estate tax deduction from their federal income taxes.

    For each property owner to understand the actual cost, they need to calculate 16 mils into dollars. This calculation is based on the “Actual Value” of each lot as determined by the County Assessor’s office and varies from lot to lot. For example:

    • If an Improved Lot (with a building on it) has an Actual Value of $100,000 the calculation is: $100,000 x .0796 = $7960 x .016 = $127.36. Which means the tax on that property is $127.36. With the $55 dues reduction, and before a real estate tax deduction, this comes to $72.36.

    • For an Unimproved Lot worth $5,000, the multiplier is quite different. The “Actual Value” of this land is multiplied by 0.29 and then multiplied by the mil of .016. This calculation would be: $5,000 x .29 = $1450 x .016 = $23.20. The annual tax is $23.20 with an additional savings of approximately $55 in reduced POA dues. With 3331 unimproved POA lots, many people will be saving money.

    The Crestone Emergency Services District aims to provide unified, stable, high quality fire, ambulance and search & rescue services, which are indisputably critical lifelines in our isolated mountain community. In order for voters to make an informed decision about what is in the best interests of our community, the Formation Committee has launched www.crestoneemergencyservices.org and will host community events, provide news updates and distribute take-home information. The website, in addition to accurate information, will include a mil calculator and a FAQ section which will answer questions posed by community members over the coming months.

  3. Drilling/retirement of minerals on Baca Nat’l Wildlife Refuge in limbo - April, 2011

    by Christine Canaly, Director San Luis Valley Ecosystem Council

    The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) issued a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) Record of Decision on April 1 regarding the Lexam Explorations, Inc. proposal to drill two 14,000 ft. exploratory oil and gas wells on the Baca National Wildlife Refuge.

    The Decision outlines 43 terms and conditions to be imposed upon Lexam by the Service. Appendix D of the final Environmental Assessment contains a full description of the protective measures. http://www.fws.gov/alamosa/BacaNWR.html

    The San Luis Valley Ecosystem Council (SLVEC), who brought the original lawsuit against the US Fish and Wildlife Service in 2007 charging that a National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)  be performed before drilling occur on the refuge, is disappointed in the FONSI decision, but not surprised.

    SLVEC has been asking for an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) since the public process began, sighting a plethora of issues. See slvec.org-Projects-Lexam. The Service has listed the 43 terms and conditions which reveals their acknowledgement regarding the significance of the area.

    The Baca National Wildlife Refuge has also just begun an EIS process for its Comprehensive Conservation Management Plan, which will determine how the Refuge will be managed over the next 20 years.  SLVEC has argued that a Management Plan be in place before drilling begins.

    Running on a parallel track and in a direction that SLVEC and Water Protection Coalition (WPC) present as the long term answer, is the buyout and retirement of the mineral rights beneath the Baca Refuge, which would also include the lands that were acquired by and for the public in the National Park and Preserve Act of 2000.

    This buyout and retirement solution was supported by Senior Judge Walker Miller when he surmised in late 2009 that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service “…did not really consider the possibility of acquiring Lexam’s mineral rights as an alternative….” As it currently stands, acquisition is not a priority for the US Fish and Wildlife Service. This is unfortunate because during settlement talks in 2010, Lexam became a willing seller of their mineral rights, asking $ 8.3 million.

    SLVEC and WPC have teamed up with Trust for Public Land (TPL) and have contracted with a consultant to do a Mineral Remoteness Study. This study will bring much-needed hard valuation facts into the negotiations with Lexam. This study will be completed in June.  It would be ideal if Lexam were not in the position of investing further in exploration, but rather, would be encouraged towards acquisition negotiations moving forward.

    SLVEC and WPC are considering reopening the lawsuit with Judge Miller which has been administratively closed because of the stipulated settlement. Over the next month serious discussions will be occurring regarding analysis of options. Stay tuned.

  4. Old & Bold Men - April, 2011

    Campsite protected from rain by rock overhang. The spring is not far away. photo by Phil Madonna

    story by Phil Madonna, Will Miles, Bill Schmidt

    photos by Phil Madonna unless noted otherwise

    The Colorado River at Spanish Bottoms a couple of miles below the confluence of the Colorado and Green Rivers.

    The scene was the usual winter Friday morning coffee get-together at the Bliss Café. Three guys with graying hair discussing something, the loudness dependent on whether Phil had in his old hearing aids. The topic of the moment was the proverb: There are bold men and there are old men, but there are no bold old men. The discussion ended when Phil (age 73) offered a way to test the saying. He threw out the bait, and Will (64) and Bill (58) bit hard.

    Three months later Bill and Will were on a muddy beach on the west bank of the Colorado River shivering uncontrollably from hypothermia. They desperately needed to cut the rope that tied their backpacks to the inner tube in order to get into their sleeping bags to survive. Meanwhile Phil was strutting naked, shouting: “Fat is good! Blubber is useful! Whales and seals know this. Look at my 215-pound body; it floated across the river. You skinny guys at 160 pounds should add some weight. That wasn’t as scary as I imagined.” He was not scared because he did not see us being swept by the strong current past the beach down to the rapids one mile below. As Bill and Will were swimming with all their might, he told them to relax and take it easy. Without his hearing aids he could not hear the roar of the approaching rapids.

    Bill and Will prepare to cross. Note the high-tech outdoor equipment, courtesy Curt Ward. photo by Phil Madonna

    When Phil offered a way to test the proverb he told us that he had read of a man hiking eight miles from the Needles Visitor Center at Canyonlands National Park, swimming across the Colorado River with a raft, and hiking in the Maze District. Will was too cheap to buy a raft, so suggested that we tie the packs to an inner tube and swim across the quarter-mile-wide river. Bill called three Park Ranger stations to get permits, and all three rangers told him in the strongest words: “Do Not Do That! You will die.” On the fourth call he reached a young male intern who told him that the Park Service could not stop us and certainly did not recommend it, but it sounded like a great adventure. That was all we needed to hear to continue our planning. We knew it was meant to happen when Curt Ward offered us an old truck inner tube.

    After we recovered from the swim, we hiked around the Maze for the next five days.  Bill, who had hiked there twice before, was our careful guide through the pristine wilderness where we met one other party. We did meet one back-country ranger who, when told that we had swum across said: “Wow, I have never heard anyone doing that before.”

    Will with his 52 lb. pack. photo by Phil Madonna

    Finally we hiked 1,200 feet down from the Doll House site to Spanish Bottom, and stared at the river that had risen after three days of rain. Will’s mind kept repeating the refrain from the old Laurel and Hardy movies: “A fine mess you have gotten us into now, Ollie.” Bill thought back to what Suzanne, the Crestone librarian said when he told her about the trip: “Stay home, you will live longer.” We decided to have a long lunch and study the situation.

    Will walked a half-mile up river to see if there was a better launch site. He saw an old campsite off the trail and decided to check it out. Then he heard a motor, and saw an outfitter from Moab dropping off a party of hikers. He ran shouting and waving, but the jet boat had already cast off. The hikers, though, heard Will, waved at the boat, and the captain returned to shore. Will explained that we had a 73-year old overweight,

    One of the many canyons in the Maze of Canyonlands National Park. photo by Phil Madonna

    half-blind and nearly deaf, old guy on his last backpacking trip who would probably die swimming across the river. For the love of God and a $50-dollar bill, would he please ferry us across. The young Mormon captain said yes, but $50 dollars was a problem. Will offered him his credit card for any amount he wanted. The captain told him that a $20-dollar bill plus the inner tube was all he could take in good conscience. The deal closed in a microsecond.

    After an exuberant repacking on the east bank, we hashed,

    Phil on the trail out. photo by Will Miles

    rehashed, and re-rehashed whether that was coincidence or providence. Phil thought it was due to accumulating merit from his years of Buddhist practice. Bill thought it was the result of a lifetime of Baha’i faithfulness. Will could make no personal claims, but was convinced that God responded to his saintly Baptist mother-in-law who has been praying for her wayward son-in-law for nearly 50 years.

    Bill and Will discussing the route in the Maze. There are many side canyons. Which to take? photo by Phil Madonna

    When the Arctic explorer Steffanson was asked to recount his adventures, he replied that he had none since adventures were due to poor planning or a deficit in intelligence, and usually both. We survived our adventure and settled the issue. There are no bold and old men, but, there are a few old, bold, fools.

  5. Sec. of State comes to count ballots; Clerk denies request - April, 2011

    by Crestone Eagle staff writers
    Secretary Gessler came to Saguache on Wednesday, March 16, 2011 to address concerns over the election in 2010. He had issued a press release on Tuesday stating he intended to hand count the commissioner and county clerk races, along with a control group. Tuesday evening, county clerk Myers replied by denying him access to the ballots he wanted to unseal and count.The litigation filed on March 16 by the Secretary of State in the 12th Judicial District Court, states what the Secretary wants from this lawsuit. “Enter an injunction requiring the Clerk to obey the Secretary’s order and permit the Secretary to inspect and review all aspects of the 2010 primary and general elections in Saguache County, including but not limited to access to all materials and equipment related to said elections, the right to transport such materials and equipment to another location, and require the clerk to be available and assist as necessary during normal business hours to enable the Secretary to “inspect.., and review the practices and procedures of’ the Clerk, including answering questions in good faith concerning her practices and procedures relating to the conduct of the 2010 primary and general elections.”In response to questions about his office’s prior involvement in the November 2010 election, he tells Saguache citizens that “1 still stand by the Secretary of State’s report.” The outcome of this review is stated in his press release. “Because the 2010 election results have already been certified, the results will not be official but will be included in a final public report to be released by the Secretary of State in the near future.”Myers states in her reply to Gessler, “After careful consideration and review of election law, it is my opinion that there is no legal basis to unseal the ballots from the 2010 General election.” She states in the public meeting, “I need court guidance, Scott,I can’t just go and let people take the ballots that I’m responsible for.” In her letter to the Secretary of State, she explains why. “It is unclear what this exercise would accomplish, and could only serve to undermine the work already done in this election. In addition, this election is under investigation by the Attorney General’s office and that process deserves to unfold without this questionable action prejudicing the proceedings. Sealed voted ballots are sensitive documents and historically treated as confidential. Without clear guidance from the courts on the legality of this proposed hand count, I would be remiss in my duty by not protecting the voter’s ballots. I stand ready to comply with whatever decision the courts pass down.”The proposed hand count drew support from the Colorado County Clerks Association on Tuesday after the press release. Scott Doyle, head of the association,”More than any other organization in Colorado, we value election integrity as the highest priority, and our state has many years of election laws on the books to address this kind of situation. We urge the Secretary to follow those laws instead of rushing to unprecedented action that may ultimately harm the process.” The Association believes that the ballots should not be public record, as reported by Sara Burnett from The Denver Post.Whereas the Clerks Association feels it will be precedent setting, the Secretary thinks otherwise.Denver Post columnist, Vince Carrol in an opinion piece entitled “Counting Ballots in the Dark”, quotes Scott Gessler as reminding the public that his office has 90 years experience in running elections …. and,” by the way my staff does the training for clerk and recorders”.At this point, the Saguache County 2010 general election has drawn attention statewide. It is entirely possible that the outcome of these proceedings will ensure proper voting procedures not just for Saguache County but also the whole State of Colorado.

  6. Structure fire at top of Willow Creek Way Worst fire in 11 years - April, 2011

    by M. Diane Bairstow

    The call for a home on fire in the Baca Grande came in at 5:45pm Tuesday, March 15 during the regularly scheduled meeting of the Baca Grande Fire Dept. (BGFD). As all the firefighters were present, the response time was immediate. When the BGFD arrived on the scene, smoke and flames were issuing from the roof, and bystanders told responders that the house was full of smoke. The homeowner’s, David Lindsey’s, car was in the driveway, and bystanders were concerned that he was in the house so they broke in windows and called to him.
    Captain Ben Brack, as the first fire department member on the scene, took over the position of Incident Commander. He immediately called for aid from the Northern Saguache County Fire Protection District (NSCFPD). Then Captain Brack transferred command to Lieutenant Treat Suomi to initiate an emergency search of the building. Brack and another responder suited up in SCBA (Self Contained
    Breathing Apparatus) gear and entered the building looking for the resident.  They went through the house once and opened another door to release smoke, and then returned for a second time as life/safety issues were involved.  No one was found in the house. Throughout the night, Brack and Suomi handed the position of Incident Commander back and forth between them as seemed appropriate.
    By the time they had depleted their first air packs—about 45 minutes—”the cavalry,” as Brack put it, had arrived. Villa Grove, Saguache, Moffat and Crestone Fire Departments were on the scene as well as the Sagauche County Sheriff’s Dept. and the Baca ambulance. Throughout the evening, the combined fire departments went through every available air pack in an effort to put out the fire. The ceiling was filled with cellulose insulation, which has some fire retardant qualities but is basically recycled paper and is almost impossible to put out without exposing it and getting it wet. Thus the ceilings in the house had to be knocked down in an effort to contain the fire. “Every time we thought we had it under control,” Brack said, “it would flare up again.” By 3am, they had finally put it out, and cleanup at the scene continued until 6:30am.
    In Brack’s eleven-year tenure on the BGFD, he has never before seen a fire of this magnitude.  Between the BGFD and the mutual aid from the other area fire departments, they had “just enough” responders and equipment. “It was eye-opening and humbling,” he said.
    Since the incident at least 100 hours have been put in to restock and restore the equipment for post-incident readiness in case another call should come in. Once again, our responders are to be commended for their service and dedication to our community.
    Lieutenant Suomi and Captain Brack want to thank all the fire departments that responded as well as the community members who helped in the effort, especially Keith Davies, Maia Dercum, Anne Silver and John Grotenhuis who brought food and beverages throughout the night to the fire fighters, and especially Tshering Dorji from the Desert Sage who donated food and drinks.  Also thanks to Laurie Lang who gave invaluable support with check-in and logistics. During the post-incident cleanup efforts, the POA donated pizzas and Joy and Elizabeth Hill brought food for the volunteers.
    David Lindsey is alive and well, and he said in an email updating the Eagle about the fire that he’s “ … grateful for all the care and love I’m receiving from all my friends and this lovely community.”  He has insurance, and the insurance investigator determined that the cause of the fire was due to an electrical fault in the wall to the left of the front door, most probably from gnawing mice (not from something on the deck as it first appeared to the fire department and which was erroneously reported in the article posted on the Eagle website). A spark then ignited the cellulose insulation in the ceiling. The fire retardant in this type of insulation, the investigator said, wears off after a year or so leaving the homeowner with, basically, flammable paper in walls and ceiling. David says he plans to rebuild and wants to give a special thanks to the Baca Volunteer Fire Department, the Crestone Fire Department and the Northern Saguache Fire Protection District.

  7. The Old Spanish Trail—Tracking Down a Trail: Part 2 - April, 2011

    by Angie Krall (Heritage Program Mgr, SLV Public Lands Center) & Marilyn Martorano (RMC Consultants, Inc)

    Spent musket ball possibly associated with the Old Spanish Trail. Photo courtesy RMC Consultants, Inc.

    This article is a continuation of last month’s piece on the Old Spanish Trail (OST). In it we discussed in broad terms the OST as a traders’ trail pioneered by Antonio Armijo in 1829 and congressionally designated as a National Historic Trail in 2002. The Northern Route was established by William Wolfskill and George C. Yount in 1831, although portions of this route had been used as early as 1776 during the Dominguez-Escalante expedition. It is the “North Branch”, a variant of the Northern Route, which extended through the San Luis Valley. During its period of significance (1829-1848, when the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo changed the political landscape and trade routes), woolens were traded for horses in Los Angeles, which were then driven back along the OST to Santa Fe. Traders heading through the San Luis Valley made their run beginning in autumn so that they could clear Cochetopa Pass before the big snows and cross the Mohave Desert when it was cooler. According to trapper Antoine Leroux, as explained in 1870 book by John C. Van Tramp, the North Branch could sometimes afford year-round travel over Cochetopa Pass due to the relative lightness of snow in comparison to the other routes.
    We will now sharpen our focus on a short, yet fascinating section of the East Fork of the North Branch of the OST where it hugs the Sangre de Cristo Mountains between the Great Sand Dunes and the area around Rito Alto Creek before it makes its turn west toward the present day town of Saguache.
    As mentioned before, locating a trail such as the OST is a daunting task. During its use as a trade route, wagons were not employed. As such, it was likely a scattered braid of trails followed by mules and horses picking their way across the landscape and herders trying to keep the fray together. What makes the East Fork of the North Branch unique is the presence of several constraining factors that likely relegated the trail into a narrower corridor than other places along its length. This is a researcher’s dream in that the reconnaissance area in terms of trail trace and associated features is reduced. The area is also highly undeveloped except for the Town of Crestone, the Baca Subdivision and a smattering of other roads, power lines, and mining and grazing infrastructure.

    The old Spanish Trail came up from Santa Fe and thorugh the San Luis Valley. It hugged the base of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains where there was firewood and protection from enemies; it also kept the travellers and beasts out of the marshy lands in the middle of the Valley. North of Crestone the trail turned west and headed to Saguache and over Cochetopa Pass.

    The two most limiting side boards of the trail were the steep massif of the Sangre de Cristos to the east and the San Luis Valley’s sand and marshlands to the west. Added to these is a very well-defined tree line of old growth piñon and juniper that has, according to some, not seen a stand-replacing burn for at least 400 years. It is likely the OST followed or stayed within this tree line to afford the travelers cover from “unfriendlies”, wood for fuel, and perhaps the opportunistic gathering of piñon nuts in the fall. Interestingly, many of the creeks that flow off of the Sangre de Cristos tend to “sub” (sink below ground level) within or at the tree line in the late summer and fall. This means that the waning snowpack water often disappears into the earth to charge the aquifer of the Closed Basin. All of these variables create a nexus wherein the trail was most likely to go.
    In the fall of 2010, RMC Consultants, Inc was once again contracted by the San Luis Valley Public Lands Center (SLVPLC) to build on the research conducted in 2009. During this effort, 203 acres were intensively surveyed on either side of the congressionally designated trail corridor, previously collected artifacts were analyzed, and the Bunker Site was further researched and doubled in size. The Bunker Site is named after a local cattle ranching family. They alerted the SLVPLC about the interesting and diverse artifacts. Bob Bunker was the manager of the Baca Ranch for years. The SLVPLC began by researching
    these artifacts and how they compare and relate to other post-contact sites and archival information from that time period.

    Robert Wunderlich examines old blaze on a large pinon pine tree. photo courtesy RMC Consultants, Inc.

    The artifact assemblage potentially associated with the Old Spanish Trail is widely varied and, given the amount of trade that occurred on the trail as described above, the task of discerning cultural affiliation (Jicarilla Apache? Hispanic?) is complex. In 1776, Dominguez and Escalante gave gifts of hunting knives, an iron ax, strings of white beads, tobacco and food. George Douglas Brewerton describes the personal items taken along the Old Spanish Trail on his journey from California to Santa Fe with Kit Carson in 1848. These included: a tin plate, tin cup, a fork, a large bowie knife, water flask, two Mexican blankets, and a Whitney’s rifle. His clothing included a fringed hunting shirt lined with red flannel and ornamented with brass buttons that he noted were useful for trading with the Indians. Other items in their possession for the journey included an iron-picket pin for tethering animals, wooden Mexican saddles, bridles of twisted hide or horse hair, “strong Spanish bits” and spurs.
    Brewerton and Carson were accompanied on the trip by 23 hired men, 3 “citizens”, and 3 Mexican servants (muleteers). Brewerton had six mules and one horse. He mentions trading his horse and a Mexican blanket to “Eutaws” (Utes) during his journey and when invited into their lodge, he noted that “upon entering the lodge the children crowded round me, admiring the gaudy scarlet cloth with which my leathern hunting-shirt was lined; most of these young people were armed with small bows and arrows which they amused themselves by aiming at me.” Examples of trade goods that were available at about the same time period in other parts of Colorado included those reported at the Fort Jackson Trading post, built near the South Platte in 1836. Trade items included looking glasses, finger rings, wrist bands, ear bobs, glass beads of all colors, bells, powder horns, axes, knives, brass kettles, blankets, vermilion, bright-colored cloth, powder, lead, and alcohol. These types of items may have also been available as trade goods along the OST.

    Selected metal artifacts from the Bunker Site. Left to right: metal projectile point, metal bridle bit, metal tinkler, metal projectile point. Photo courtesy of RMC Consultants, Inc.

    Tinklers, sometimes referred to as jingles, are conical ornaments made by cutting sheet metal into triangles and curling them into cones. They were often used to decorate clothing, moccasins, bags, and quivers. Multiple tinklers, when attached to lengths of leather, would hit each other producing the “tinkling” sound.
    Metal arrow points, most often made of iron, were a common trade item from the early 1600s to as late as the early twentieth century. Some metal points were made by European and American cutlery firms, some were apparently made by trading post blacksmiths, but the greatest number appear to have been of Indian manufacture. The Indians used metal chisels, axes, and files to cut and shape the points from strap iron such as barrel hoops or other similar materials. Metal arrow points likely supplanted most of the chipped stone arrow point technology by the mid-nineteenth century.
    A variety of other metal artifacts were also known to have made their way along the trail. Awls, metal knives and other metal tools were reportedly a common trade item along the OST. Metal coscojos are metal jingles attached to a bridle or bit and were made from flat strips of iron with a loop at one end and were hung like pendants from the headstall plate or chains of a Spanish or Mexican style ring bit. The lower row of coscojos did not have a hole in them but the upper row (closest to the headstall plate or bridge) had a single hole for the lower coscojos to loop through.
    Trade beads include seed beads and other larger beads. Blue and white seed beads were reportedly the most common type although other colors such as red and green have been found. Larger beads came in various shapes such as round, faceted, barreled and tubular; colors ranged from blue, white, clear, black, green, amber, red, and lavender. Seed beads are generally thought to have been introduced as trade goods on the western slope of Colorado ca.1839/1840.
    Beads used for trade may have been common in the earlier periods in the San Luis Valley because of ties to New Mexico. As noted above, Dominguez and Escalante reportedly gave strings of white beads as trading gifts in 1776.
    Firearms were major objects of early trade along the Old Spanish Trail. They were important items for trade with Native Americans who, like Euroamericans, kept them on hand for hunting and protection. Initially, unrifled muzzle-loading muskets were produced specifically for the Indian trade. These guns were difficult to load, inaccurate, and cumbersome to use by an individual on horseback.
    British gunflints were produced from the late 1700s to the early 1900s and are characterized by the use of a gray to black glassy flint and a micro-burin technique for separating flint blades into square segments to form the shape of a gunflint. French gunflints were honey or blond-colored and were irregular in shape compared to British gunflints that were rectangular.
    The Bunker Site, fully documented in 2009, revealed a large site composed of prehistoric, proto-historic (post-contact), and historic artifacts. Two Culturally Modified Trees (CMTs) have also been identified on site. Both trees are piñon and exhibit axe cuts similar to trail blazes. The age of the trees and blazes are not known, but based on the large diameter of the trees, they could be quite old. In addition, a total of 11 pieces of obsidian were collected from the site in 2009 and sent to Northwest Research Obsidian Labs to perform the sourcing analyses using X-Ray Fluorescence. The results of the analyses are intriguing regarding the use and availability of obsidian sources within Colorado. Ninety-one percent (n=10) of the obsidian assemblage at the Bunker Site is sourced to the Jemez Mountains of New Mexico, which contains both the Cerro del Medio and Polvadera Peak obsidian sources. Ten percent (n=1) of the assemblage is sourced to the Cochetopa Dome obsidian source.
    The Cochetopa Dome obsidian source is the only defined source of obsidian known to be within the geographic boundaries of Colorado. Very limited amounts of usable obsidian have been located at the Cochetopa Dome obsidian source area, which is described as being limited to pebble-sized pieces of material. The obsidian sourcing results suggest influence primarily from the south (Jemez sources) and minor influence from the west (Cochetopa Dome source). Cochetopa Dome is located near the OST where it heads west from Cochetopa Pass. Whether this source may have been utilized in association with OST activities is unknown. However, obsidian may have been used for tool making and trade by Native Americans and possibly by Hispanics during the OST period of significance.
    The site assemblage of the Bunker Site is widely varied and includes lithic debitage (waste materials produced while working stone), bone tools, flaked stone tools, stone and metal projectile points, ceramics, two musket balls, coscojo, a scrolled metal bit fragment, glass trade beads, ground stone, and various other metal artifacts. Based on the inferred dates of the artifacts, it appears that the site represents a multi-component occupation. The projectile points (arrowheads) suggest a wide range of dates that include 3000-1900 Before Present (BP), 1900-900 BP and between AD 1300 and the Historic Period. The wide range of dates suggests a continuous occupation and use of the site during the last 3000 years, thus supporting the idea that the travel corridor was pioneered by Native American tribes well before the Spanish entrada.

    Other artifacts possibly associated with he Old Spanish Trail. Top to bottom: Metal knife handle, spent musket ball and brass kettle bale ear.

    The other artifacts such as the metal points, musket balls, glass trade beads and other metal artifacts suggest a post-contact occupation. The conspicuous absence of historic cartridges and percussion caps, glass artifacts, tin cans, and modern round nails and construction materials at the site is unique in the area and suggests occupation dates ca. 1820-1860, or possibly earlier. Therefore, the post-contact occupation may possibly be related to camping/trading activities occurring along the OST, which is mapped as passing through the extreme northeastern end of the site. As noted previously, trails such as OST were likely to have varied trail alternatives so the trail could have easily passed through any portion of the site.
    In 2011 we will continue our research of the Bunker Site specifically. The goals will be to gather more data on the chronology, site function, ethnicity, site patterns and site selection. Methodologies will include limited test excavation, intensive site survey and the coring of large piñon trees that exhibit blazes to obtain tree ring dates. It may be very difficult to differentiate sites occupied by Native Americans participating in Euroamerican trade networks from Native American sites with other activity focuses during this early contact period, and it may also be difficult to differentiate sites occupied by Euroamerican traders from contemporaneous Native American sites. That said, much may be revealed with a closer look at the patterning across the site in terms of features and artifacts.
    The historical artifacts that the trail is likely to yield may be sparse or localized in favored campsites and other associated sites. Trading campsites were usually occupied by small numbers of individuals with few material goods for a short duration, and probably resulted in little alteration of the landscape. For this reason, trade camps are probably one of the rarest resources because of their ephemeral nature. Therefore it is important to note here that these resources are protected on federal lands and that it is illegal to remove them. Without their analysis, we would not be able to bring you this story. Through this work they are the medium for a more complete historic tapestry.
    The San Luis Valley Public Lands Center works in partnership with the La Vereda del Norte Chapter of the Old Spanish Trail Association (OSTA) that sponsors events and activities around the history of the Trail. For more information or to become a member visit the OSTA website: www.oldspanishtrail.org. For more information about membership and activities sponsored by the La Vereda del Norte Chapter, you can also contact Ken Frye at 719-852-6233.