destroying smuggler’s gulch

Smugglers Gulch and Tijuana River Valley

I’m stand­ing in the United States as I take this pic­ture. The hills you see are less than a mile to the south but are mostly in Mex­ico, across the bor­der. The low break in the hills car­ries the name Smuggler’s Gulch.

The mouth of said gulch has been part of one of the more con­tro­ver­sial ter­raform­ing projects in progress as we speak, the demon­stra­tion of enhanced fenc­ing tech­niques that is the US-Mexico bor­der fence. Ironic/pathetic isn’t it, that not that many weeks ago the news was buzzing with the twen­ti­eth anniver­sary of the fall of the Berlin wall, but here in many of our back yards new walls are going up? I’ll leave dis­cus­sion of the ethics and human costs of the fence-building mind­set to orga­ni­za­tions like Amnesty Inter­na­tional or even the Catholic Church, but the project’s costs to stuff like nature are pretty steep as well.

Left: This photo by April Reese from a Jan­u­ary Land Let­ter shows much bet­ter than my photo just some of the earth mov­ing that went into block­ing off this canyon. [ Source ]

When peo­ple hear that the Depart­ment of Home­land Secu­rity is build­ing a fence they might say, oh that’s nice, what harm can a lit­tle 15 foot tall fence do? Well, place your nice lit­tle 15 foot fence on top of 35,000 truck­loads of fill dirt essen­tially form­ing an earthen dam designed to con­tain humans instead of water. Humans have more cog­ni­tive abil­ity than water mol­e­cules, so what might con­tain water will just send the humans to the next avail­able cross­ing point.

The rich coastal chap­ar­ral that was here has been bull­dozed and buried. Hay wat­tles with some hydroseeded low-growing plants will be expect to take care of ero­sion con­trol. Down-slope, the sen­si­tive habi­tat of the Tijuana River National Estu­ar­ine Research Reserve waits to see what’s going to hap­pen once the rains begin.

December 04 2009 | Categories: landscapeplaces | Tags: | 10 Comments »