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Welcome to Waste of the West.com, an online adaption of Lynn Jacob's comprehensive book that documents the destructive practice of grazing cattle on public lands.
DESERT OR PASTURE:
Preface
CHAPTERS: 1 -
2 - 3 -
4 - 5 -
6 - 7 - 8
- 9 - 10 - 11
- 12
Photo Galleries
- ORDER A PRINTED COPY!
Introduction:
You
and I and all Americans are joint land owners.
Together as "the public" we own almost half of the land in the
11 Western states (Washington, Oregon, California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah,
Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico), which hold 90% of
all federal land in the United States outside Alaska. If state, county,
and city-owned land is included, 56% of the West is public land.
This public land encompasses an incredible amount and variety of country
-- some of the most diverse and beautiful in the world, including the
Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, Death Valley, the slickrock country of southern
Utah ... Few other countries have so much land open to all people.
Each year by the millions they come from throughout the United States
and around the world to visit these public lands, pursuing various experiences.
Millions of hunters and fishers, hikers and backpackers, picnickers and
sightseers enjoy the public lands. For scientists and researchers they
are invaluable, huge, open-air laboratories. To naturalists, they are
the largest remaining wild areas in this country -- strongholds of natural
diversity. They contain many natural resources and provide for a great
variety of personal and commercial uses. They expand our physical, emotional,
and spiritual horizons and help maximize personal freedom. Public lands
are many things to many people.
Public lands are much more than all this, however. They are exactly what
they are: soil, water, and air; plants and animals; climatic, geologic,
hydrologic, and biologic processes; ecosystems; interrelationships; evolution;
life -- existence. Western public land encompasses 418 million acres of
Nature, of largely untransformed natural being. It is a continuing, progressive
creation -- the current, cumulative result of the 5-billion-year evolvement
of this planet.
All native entities of public land, from microscopic soil bacteria to
grizzly bears, from desert globemallow to giant sequoias, from hot springs
to lava flows, whether they occur individually or as communities, whether
organic or inorganic, all share one thing: the right to exist. And though
continued existence is not guaranteed to all on this Earth, the opportunity
to pursue natural existence without undue human interference should be.
The environment itself has the right to exist in a healthy, natural state,
for its own sake, regardless of any human considerations.

The world
we are told was made for man. A presumption that is totally unsupported
by facts. There is a very numerous class of men who are cast into painful
fits of astonishment whenever they find anything, living or dead, in all
God's universe, which they cannot eat or render in some way what they
call useful to themselves....
-John
Muir
For
many people, the intrinsic value of Nature is something intuitively
sensed yet rarely discussed. Standing amidst a sea of waving grass or
engulfed in the roar and mist of a waterfall can fill one with awe and
humility, and inspire a feeling of protectiveness. Unfortunately, we
tend to bury these sentiments as we go about our daily lives.
Although we humans have developed extraordinary powers to manipulate
our surroundings for our purposes, we always will remain a part of Nature
-- a creation of our natural environment, a component of the whole.
As such, we need to protect the whole to protect ourselves. Ironically,
by unnaturally exploiting the environment for short-term gain, in the
long run we hurt ourselves, and our descendants.
Therefore, we should not only be "owners" of public land but
defenders of this land. We have the responsibility to use it wisely,
if indeed we use it at all. Because we have developed the power to control
the land, we must also protect and in some cases restore it, for both
our sake and the planet's
As collective public land owners, we have relied largely on various
government agencies to implement our wishes for wise use and protection
of the land. But our governments have not done, are not doing, and even
refuse to do their job. In fact, with our governments' help, a small
sector of the business community has continuously manipulated and exploited
public land for personal gain for more than 100 years. Ultimately, we
are all responsible. We should have stopped it long ago.
American
public land wasted by livestock.
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Unfortunately,
the most harmful land use in all history is also one of the most subtle
and least recognized -livestock production. The seemingly benign act
of raising livestock has caused more environmental damage than any other
land use, not only in the western US, but throughout the world (see
Chapter VI).
On Western public land this commercial exploitation is the product of
a well-organized, powerful, private ranching business allied with an
entrenched government bureaucracy. Through the years, the public lands
grazing industry has been quietly receiving billions of dollars in taxpayer
subsidies, corrupting our political system, defiling the social fabric
of the rural West, and, perhaps worst of all, devastating the Western
environment -- all to produce a tiny fraction of US meat.
At this point, you may again suspect me of exaggeration or even fabrication.
This is understandable. Few of us are exposed to ranching other than
through the usual fictional renderings of the romantic "Old West,"
as on TV and in Western literature. And as a people we have always idolized
the legendary, independent, honest, tough, hardworking, resourceful,
and in all ways virtuous Western rancher and endorsed the products of
his* endeavors. Mom, apple pie, the cowboy and his cows. Americans love
a good Western!
Nevertheless, this nostalgic, idealistic image we have all been reared
with is a vast falsehood, a monumental myth preserved by baseless tradition,
our own yearning for romanticism, and the ranching establishment's efforts
to capitalize on our yearnings. Therefore, the real story of Western
ranching may come as a shock.
* In this book I purposefully use the male rather than neuter form in
reference to the stock raiser in recognition that ranching is so completely
male-dominated.
So now we come to the business which created the West's most powerful
illusion about itself and, though this is not immediately apparent,
has done more damage to the West than any other The stock business.
--Bernard DeVoto, The Easy Chair (DeVoto 1955)
| 
National
Forest in Oregon (USFS) |
PUBLIC
LANDS RANCHING:
Stockmen
use 70% of the American West for raising livestock, and most of this
land is owned by the public. Is ranching a harmless, romantic remnant
of the Old West? Or is it the West's most destructive influence? What
are Lee Pitts and public lands ranchers trying to hide? Why do a growing
number of experts and activists consider ranching the rural West's
most harmful influence? Controversy rages and continues to spread.
Some say this will be the next great environmental (and perhaps sociopolitical)
struggle in the US West.
Waste of the
West explores step by step a remarkably sordid, unjust, cruel,
wasteful, and destructive situation -- the obscure and secure world
of public lands ranching. Forget your cowboy movies, your Western
novels, your romantic ranching fantasies, and find out what really
goes on out there in the vast rural West. This book is an education,
an expose, and a call to action.
-
easy-reading,
complete account of public lands ranching and its influences for the
general reader, specialist, or activist
- chapters on the
historic and contemporary situations; environmental, economical, political,
and cultural/social/personal impacts; animal welfare; global livestock
production; and ranching justifications/myths, alternatives, and future
- many ideas for
activism, a contact list, complete statistics, inspirational quotations,
a 500-item bibliography, and a thorough index
- heavily illustrated
with more than 1000 photos, drawings, cartoons, graphics, charts, and
maps
- 8 1/2" x 11"
page size for easy copying
Site
Index: Waste of the West: Public Lands Ranching
This online resource
will include:
- History
of ranching on public lands
- Current
status of cattle on public lands today
- The
environmental effects of grazing cattle, sheep, goats and other livestock
- ranching's
effect on plants - grasslands, forest, brushland, desert
- livestock's
effect on soil, water - watersheds, surface waters, riparian areas,
flooding, water quality
- cattle's effect
on other animals - large native ungulates, disease and parasites,
other native animals.
- other environmental
effects including: fire and air
- other livestock
grazing issues - enclosures and fenceline contrasts, photos
- Range
development and its effect on the environment
- Range improvements
for cattle animals - fences, water developments, roads, salt, etc
- Range management
- mechanical, chemical, biological, livestock, fire, seeding
- Animal enemies
- Animal Damage Control (USDA's Wildlife
Services) - predators, competitors, pests, no-"goods"
- Suffering of Livestock
- Global perspective
- Welfare
Ranching - Grazing fees, squandering our taxes, other losses
- Social/cultural
issues
- Politics - Publications
and public relations, other public ranchlands
- Benefits of public
lands ranching (for those who profit at the expense of the planet)
- Justification/myths
- Alternatives
- Reform
- Raised grazing
fees
- Competitive
or open bid leases
- Game ranching
- Savory's salvation
- The stockmen's
solution
- Last roundup
- Future for ranching
of cattle, sheep's, goats on publicly owned lands
- Getting involved
NEWS/Links:
Public Lands Without Livestock
THE
MAD GAS RUSH
In its haste to indulge energy companies, the White House is sacrificing
fish, wildlife, and the ranchers of the Rocky Mountain West.
Western Watersheds.org
Public
Lands Ranching.org
Grazing
Links
Public
Lands Grazing Activist
http://www.gci-net.com/~users/w/wolfsoul/environment/cattle/cattle.html
OUTST
COWS!
ENDANGERED
SPECIES AND LIVESTOCK GRAZING ON PUBLIC LANDS
Forest
Guardian's Public Lands Grazing Page
Wildlife
Damage Review
APNM's
Animal Damage Control Website
Beyond
Beef
email us
to post your link:
links@wasteofthewest.com
Photo
Galleries
Livestock Ranching & Grazing Links
Note: Remaining chapters are currently in design/editing. Graphics have
not been integrated with current chapters yet.

Fence
Line Ecology Photo Gallery
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