<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Wednesday,  December 4 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Northwest

Removing tangled legacy of barbed wire

Efforts underway to get rid of obsolete, deadly fencing

By Damian Fagan, Columbia Insight
Published: October 11, 2022, 6:05am

It’s ugly, dangerous and destructive. In its time, it was heralded as one of history’s great inventions.

In the 1870s, barbed wire fencing was advertised as “The Greatest Discovery of the Age.” Joseph Glidden patented his product and billed it as “lighter than air, stronger than whiskey and cheaper than dirt.”

As much as any development — the steam engine and telegraph included — barbed wire changed the North American frontier.

By 1880, Glidden’s factory in DeKalb, Ill., had produced more than 263,000 miles of double-strand wire, enough to circle the planet 10 times over.

“It takes no room, exhausts no soil, shades no vegetation, is proof against high winds, makes no snowdrifts and is both durable and cheap,” one ranching advocate explained.

But the same fencing that penned in domestic livestock decimated ancient migratory routes for wildlife and created a deadly hazard for birds and game.

Today, an estimated 620,000 miles of fencing — enough to stretch around the Earth nearly 25 times — crisscrosses the West.

But organized efforts are underway to remove unsightly, deadly and obsolete barbed wire.

One of the best case studies of these rehabilitation efforts comes from the high desert sagebrush steppe east of Oregon’s Cascades Range.

Beatys Butte project

In the mid-1990s, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service phased out grazing within the 278,100-acre Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge in Southeastern Oregon. After the cattle departed, the Oregon Desert Natural Association, or ONDA, stepped in to assist with removing over 300 miles of interior fencing.

“ONDA has been removing or working with barbed wire fencing since we started engaging volunteers for most of our 35 years,” says Gena Goodman-Campbell, Oregon Desert Natural Association stewardship director.

Those early efforts have since expanded across Oregon’s high desert.

In September, Oregon Desert Natural Association organized the Beatys Butte Fenceline Retrofit Project, a four-day camping expedition with six volunteers to improve pronghorn passage by retrofitting barbed wire fence to wildlife-friendly standards. Oregon Desert Natural Association led a similar trip in May with 13 volunteers.

“Retrofitting a barbed wire fence to be more friendly for wildlife consists of replacing one or more of the barbed wires with smooth wire so that wildlife can pass more easily over or under the fence,” says Goodman-Campbell. “In this case, volunteers replaced the bottom barbed wire with smooth wire and ensured the new bottom wire was about 16 inches above the ground so that pronghorn would be able to pass under the fence without getting tangled up in the wire.”

The two trips in 2022 retrofitted about four miles of barbed wire fence, helping to reconnect migration routes for pronghorn.

As part of the “land between” Hart and Sheldon National Wildlife Refuges in the Bureau of Land Management’s Lakeview District in south-central Oregon, the Beatys Butte allotment encompasses 575,495 acres, 506,985 acres of which are public land. According to Oregon Desert Natural Association, the area is used as winter and migratory habitat for pronghorn antelope, and habitat for sage grouse, pygmy rabbits, western big-eared bats, ferruginous hawks, burrowing owls, desert and short-horned lizards and other mammals and birds.

“Beatys Butte is an integral part of the landscape between Hart Mountain and the Sheldon National Wildlife Refuges and is a critical migration corridor for pronghorn between the two refuges,” says Goodman-Campbell.

“Fences clearly can disrupt migration corridors for wildlife, especially larger ungulate wildlife, with how the fences are designed,” says Shannon Ludwig, Sheldon-Hart Mountain National Wildlife Refuge Complex refuge manager. “Deer like to jump over fences, and pronghorn and bighorn sheep like to go under the fences.”

Stay informed on what is happening in Clark County, WA and beyond for only
$99/year

Working with the BLM, Oregon Desert Natural Association equipped volunteers with a smartphone app and maps to document over 100 miles of Beatys Butte fence in need of retrofitting.

Oregon Desert Natural Association hopes to continue the ongoing project next year. One of its next steps is to work with BLM to analyze data gathered by volunteers alongside pronghorn migration data to prioritize which sections of fence should be retrofitted next.

“The Bureau of Land Management is very happy to have ONDA’s help in inventorying the condition of our fences as well as accomplishing on-the-ground work,” says Kate Yates, Lakeview District BLM wildlife biologist. “At this time, it’s just ONDA, but there is always room for other groups to help out.”

Clearing Hart Mountain

One of Oregon Desert Natural Association’s major successes has been the Hart Mountain Project. Started in the mid-1990s and completed in 2012, the effort pulled more than 300 miles of obsolete barbed wire from the Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge.

“It’s pretty gratifying work to pull up to a spot in the morning and see a barbed wire fence, then get back into your car at the end of the day, tired, hot and hungry, and look back at where the fence was and it’s now like virgin land,” says John Katzenstein, an Oregon Desert Natural Association volunteer who participated in the final Hart Mountain fence pull in 2012. “It’s really rewarding, not just for us ONDA folks, but for hunters, hikers, fisherman, bikers and the wildlife.”

Oregon Desert Natural Association has also removed over 125 tons of fencing from the cattle-free section of the Steens Mountain Wilderness.

“Some areas could be accessed by vehicles, but ONDA has also removed wire via helicopters or horse packers,” says Craig Terry, an ONDA volunteer from Hood River who has been participating in fence-removal projects since 2008.

Depending upon the condition, wire and posts are recycled or reused.

Support local journalism

Your tax-deductible donation to The Columbian’s Community Funded Journalism program will contribute to better local reporting on key issues, including homelessness, housing, transportation and the environment. Reporters will focus on narrative, investigative and data-driven storytelling.

Local journalism needs your help. It’s an essential part of a healthy community and a healthy democracy.

Community Funded Journalism logo
Loading...