Take it or Leave it: ‘New West Blues’ Revisited, 30 Years Later… by Jim Stiles

A JUNE 2021 INTRODUCTION:

In June 1990, thirty-one years ago this month, I penned a Page Two essay for my fledgling newspaper, The Canyon Country Zephyr, called “New West Blues.” The Zephyr had only existed for a bit more than a year. In those days, we printed on a monthly schedule and of course, it was strictly a print publication in 1990. The internet didn’t exist as a popular means of disseminating information. 

Stiles, overlooking the 24 Hours of Moab Bike Race

The Zephyr and “Industrial Strength Recreation” seemed to hit Moab at about the same time. The mountain bike phenomenon had exploded in Southeast Utah just a couple years earlier and we were already seeing profound changes to our little town. I had dedicated much of my life in Moab up to that time to ranting about the impacts and excesses of the energy industry, as it affected the landscapes of my beloved canyon country. I had also been a devoted follower of Edward Abbey, who rarely had a kind word to say about coal mines or oil wells. 

But it was also Abbey who coined the term “Industrial Tourism” in Desert Solitaire. As the Moab business community turned more and more to recreation and tourism to solve its financial problems, the more I became aware of the threat of it. I worried about its effect on the landscape, but I also wondered what it might do to the environment and social fabric of the community where I had lived for the last 15 years. A year before Abbey died, I took him up to the Sand Flats to see the mountain bike circus being played out on the recently revived “Slick Rock Bike Trail.” Ed was stunned; he had long been an advocate for bicycles as basic transportation, but this was something different.

A year later, on another April visit to the Sand Flats, I was overwhelmed with a sense of doom, and a longing for a past that I had not, until that moment, appreciated. I went home and wrote this piece. Keep in mind, in 1989, visitation at nearby Arches National Park was 550,000. Last year it exceeded 1.5 million. Many expect to see it break two million in 2021. I don’t know if I could have predicted that Moab’s transformation would morph into a transmogrification as it has now. But it did seem to me as if some profound changes awaited the town and the American Rural West. Here is the way I saw it, and the way it felt, back in 1990 when I had failed to notice that the world was still young…

*** *** ***

This ain’t the same old range.
Everything seems to change.
Where are the pals I used to ride with?
…Gone to a land so strange.

–The Sons of the Pioneers

Sandflats. Photo by Jim Stiles
The Sandflats. 1990

 In my never-ending quest to try to make some sense out of what is happening to us here in the rural West, I haven’t “been to the mountaintop,” but I’ve been to the Sand Flats above town, and the view from there is discouraging.

A few days ago, my attorney and I took a drive to survey the destruction. (I hadn’t been back since the “Easter Weekend Riots”.)  Besides being surprised at the number of campers still enduring the 100 degree heat, I was shocked at my reaction to another sight that should have only caused more aggravation. After wading through a hundred or more bikers, we came around a corner and saw local rancher Don Holyoak with a couple dozen cows. Smelly, stupid, fly-ridden cows…”stinking bovines,” Abbey used to call them.

 I was glad to see them.

Don’t get me wrong. I still believe that the mismanaged use of our public lands for cattle has done immeasurable damage to the land, has fouled countless streams and water sources, and been a burden on the U.S. taxpayer. In fact, efforts by the extractive industries to literally tear up the West for maximum profit continue at an alarming and devastating rate. But I have become painfully aware of a shift in my thinking that has left me confused and bewildered. 

Cumbres Cowboy. Photo by Jim Stiles

There are more than a few of us longtime environmentalists who are suffering from some kind of an identity crisis. Edward Abbey once wrote, “The idea of wilderness needs no defense; it only needs more defenders.” But to be a defender of the West has changed in 15 years. Just who poses the greatest threat to the West? Where does the real danger lie? I’m afraid it’s become more complicated than I ever thought it could. This is not just another complaint about our changing town– the New Moab. What’s happening here is happening elsewhere. And what’s coming may be bigger than even we doomsayers would dare predict. Barring a miracle, we are about to enter a new phase, the last phase, in the taming of the West. When it’s over it won’t be “the West” anymore.  We all know “how the West was won.” What we are about to see is “how the West was done.” To use a recently popular expression, pretty soon, you can stick a fork in it. And all of us, no matter how much we love the country, bear responsibility.

UDOT image of downtown Moab
UDOT image of downtown Moab

When I first moved here in the late 70s, the threats to the canyon country were obvious and easy to define. The extractive industries…oil and gas, uranium, timber and cattle…those operations that actually reduced the quality of the resource, were the natural target of environmentalists. In those years, the desert was turned upside down by seismic crews and oil rigs, chaining operations, and a never-ending series of harebrained ideas to exploit the fragile Western landscape. For almost a year, we could see the big mercury vapor lights on an Exxon oil rig in Gold Basin, a place too beautiful for such a monstrous intrusion. Seismic crews worked right to the edge of Arches and Canyonlands National Parks, collecting geologic information that they could sell to other energy companies. In their wake, they left hundreds of miles of ugly scars that would take centuries to heal. The Department of Energy wanted to build a high-level nuclear repository adjacent to the Needles in San Juan County. The BLM continued to chain thousands of acres of pinion-juniper forest as part of its “range improvement” policy (and one of my favorite euphemisms, I might add, next to “nuclear exchange”).

In short, there was plenty to complain about. And we complained loudly, well, and often. We, who actually lived here in the heart of the country we were trying to defend, felt honored and proud to be a part of the battle on the front lines. It was, after all, not easy to live in the rural west; it truly required a sacrifice. Just trying to find a way to eke out a living was a challenge, for most jobs were low paying and many were seasonal. In addition, a poor infrastructure, a lack of cultural opportunities, under funded schools, and an extremely closed conservative population made it difficult for an “outsider” to survive. That is why, despite warnings by some about the threat of “industrial tourism” for more than 25 years, the effect on the West by all those millions of gawkers seemed trivial when compared to the damage a bulldozer could do.

There were, of course, blatant exceptions. Some of the West’s national parks began to show the effect of abuse and overuse decades ago. Several small towns, from Aspen and Telluride, to Jackson and Taos, were transformed from sleepy, even dying, little mining and ranching villages, to bustling communities full of trendy restaurants and boutiques. They became rustic playgrounds for the rich and famous.

But they were the exception to the rule. The rest of the West changed very little from a demographic standpoint. Generation after generation grew up in the same small western communities. The towns looked the same, decade after decade. A person could go away for years and come back to his home town and find the same grocer behind the cash register, the same postmaster behind the stamp window. But it was more than just the way these little towns looked. It was the pace of life itself that set such communities apart. While some may call it stagnation, it was comforting to find such continuity in a world that turns itself inside out on a daily basis.

The bikes coming in... photo by Jim Stiles
The bikes coming in…

All that is changing at breakneck speed. We are watching, in effect, the last land rush, and when it’s over, the West will bear little resemblance to what it still is today. The decay of America’s cities and urban areas, the congestion, the pollution,  the crime…the stress of urban life, is driving millions to the wide open spaces. And the explosive growth of tourism is creating, for the first time, the climate necessary for that kind of exodus. For the first time, West Coast immigrants can dream of moving to a rural community and making more than a subsistence living. No sacrifice is needed to sell a $500,000 home in California, buy a $100,000 home in a small Western town, invest $200,000 in a business, and put the rest in the bank. A few hope to be modern day Charlie Steens, dreaming of get-rich-quick schemes. But this time, fortunes won’t be made with a second hand drill rig and a thousand dollar grubstake. Speculators buy up land for JB’s and McDonald’s franchises the way miners staked uranium claims in the 50s.

As long as people in the cities can sell their homes at a great profit (and so far, the prices continue to rise exorbitantly), and can take that money and reinvest here, where the prices are still substantially lower, we will continue to see this remarkable inflow of humanity.

Is it all that bad? In some ways, it’s not. Critics of tourism as an economic base claim that such an industry is too unstable, that a town that builds its economy around tourism is asking for trouble, that sooner or later, the bubble will burst and all the tourists will go somewhere else. But I just don’t see that happening. While energy towns have gone boom and bust for decades, I cannot think of a single tourist town that ever went belly up. Maybe business in these communities has ebbed and flowed with the national or regional economy, but dry up and blow away? Never.

So…with an established tourist base, a changing community profile that demands better educational and cultural opportunities, and a larger tax base, positive changes to the community are inevitable. And yet, in a perverse way, those same improvements represent the final nails in the West’s coffin, changes that guarantee the demise of the West as we know it.

The cows moving out... photo by Jim Stiles
The cows moving out…

For me, “the West” is a lot more than the sum of its parts. The West is, first of all, the resource itself. The West is the desert, the canyons, the mountains and the wildlife that roams among them. It’s the wildflowers that bloom in the most unexpected places and the gnarled spruce that clings to life at 12,000 feet. It’s the polished skies and the exploding cotton clouds that loom over the high peaks each afternoon. It’s the kangaroo rats and fence lizards that we see all the time and the cougar that we wait a lifetime to see just once for a fleeting moment.

But the West is more than that.

The intangible aspect of the West is as vital to its survival as the resource itself. It’s the solitude, the silence, an almost pleasant loneliness that this country evokes in the souls of those that love it. These are an integral part of the West as a state of mind. Abbey could not describe this land without references to the “strange and mysterious” country that he loved so much…”the voodoo rocks.” Even the inhospitable aspect of the West itself became a quality to be admired and respected. You loved the West on its terms and made the sacrifices that were required to be a part of it. Solitude was not something to avoid, it was something to love and respect, and even to depend on.

So today, as I re-examine what the West is, I find a strange contradiction in the experiences I seek out. For instance, I can hike into the badlands country north of Arches, into country that was torn apart 40 years ago by the uranium industry and which still bears the scars, and there amidst the rubble can feel like I’m in the West. I poke my head in a deserted miner’s cabin and find a Great Horned Owl in the rafters waiting for nightfall. I sit down on the rocks above the Big Ape mine and watch the sun set behind the Devils Garden. Magnificent silence, brilliant light, only the wind and the hooting of that owl to disturb the silence of the evening…the West.

BLM image.
BLM image.

But I can hike to Delicate Arch, where the resource has been preserved for sure, but also promoted to the far corners of the planet, and I feel like I’m in Disneyland. Surrounded by dozens of camera snapping, video taping tourists, screaming kids, and well-armed rangers, I think to myself…this is not the West.

But it may be the future of the West. It seems to be what the People want. Those wonderful intangibles have lost their appeal to many of the New Westerners. In fact, all that solitude appears to scare a lot of them to death. Look at the way recent visitors, and even our most recent residents, “explore” the country. They travel in groups. Some might say they travel in herds…that we are seeing one herd (livestock) being driven from the country, only to be replaced by another. Where visitors once came here for the peace and solitude and beauty of the land, now they come for “breathtaking thrills.” Those who found a trip to the canyon country to be akin to a religious experience have been replaced to a large degree by “recreationists” who regard this country as a playground, and who seem to have a diminished or non-existent environmental ethic. So people come here looking for organized ways of having fun.

Before skiing became popular, the mountains were cold and hostile and forbidding…they were nice to look at from a safe distance. But the sport changed everything. Here in the desert, it was the same story. Hot, desolate…a nice place to watch from the comfort of an air conditioned car, but who the hell would want to live in this godforsaken place? When I was a ranger, tourists thought I’d been assigned to Arches as some kind of punishment…”What did you do wrong to get stuck in this hell hole, boy?”

Bike tracks at the Sandflats. 1990. Photo by Jim Stiles
Bike tracks at the Sandflats. 1990

Again, the sport, in this case mountain biking, changed everything. It changed the very reason people come here. We went from mystical to macho, from watching a hawk, to “riding the ‘rawk'” (biking lingo). From “desert mystics” to “adrenalin junkies.”

The sport, of course, and the reputation and notoriety it creates, spawns the ever growing stream of businesses that are created to provide equipment and services for those organized thrills. And once a newer more hip tourist infrastructure is in place, with a plethora of restaurants, boutiques, Southwest art galleries, and jewelry shops, the nouveau riche suddenly find the area much more appealing, and start looking for little “ranchettes” upon which to build their million dollar summer homes.

And here is the most frustrating aspect of the change. While some speculators see the West as a product to be marketed and sold like soap or headache remedies, a great majority of the new businesses that cater to the tourists and recreationists are simply people who are longing to escape their miserable, polluted, crime-ridden urban existences for the simpler life. The overwhelming number of new residents in Moab didn’t come here to get rich. They simply want to live here. Once they arrive, they wring their hands and hope that the situation doesn’t get any worse. I’ve done my own share of hand wringing. This paper’s circulation has doubled in one year and I should be thrilled, but it’s also an indication of what’s happening to the town…we’re booming. Does my paper somehow encourage more people to move here? The fact is, the sheer numbers of the immigrants will almost certainly mean that what they’re running from… congestion, pollution, crime and stress, will follow them here. That, in turn, will diminish the quality of everyone’s life. But who has the right to say “Go away?”

 And so, it continues. Californians, Coloradans from the Front Range, as well as entrepreneurs from across the country, are buying up commercial and private property in rural counties all over the West. In Wayne County, out-of-state property sales are at an all time high and property values have increased dramatically. There is a housing shortage in Emery County because so many homes are owned by absentee landlords. In New Mexico and Arizona, the story is the same.

Is there a solution to all this? Is there a way to preserve the West? Can we protect the resource and those precious intangibles? Actually, I think the answer is “no.” Fighting strip mines and oil wells was easy. They were such black and white targets. What’s happening now is so much more insidious. Where would someone even begin? 

UDOT Image of the traffic outside Moab

The truth is, all the ordinances and regulations in the world can’t change our lifestyle. We can’t begin to see that the Real Enemy is the face we see in the mirror every day of our lives. Humans and their toys…What a deadly combination.

Someone once asked the great humorist Dorothy Parker to use the word “horticulture” in a sentence. She replied, “You can lead a horticulture, but you can’t make her think.”

 Ms. Parker would have understood the New West.

Jim Stiles is Founding Publisher and Senior Editor of the Canyon Country Zephyr.

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13 comments for “Take it or Leave it: ‘New West Blues’ Revisited, 30 Years Later… by Jim Stiles

  1. June 1, 2021 at 9:56 am

    After years of trying to find a,sturdy bikes my kids could ride off road, I saw my first mountain bike and thought, wow, that should work. I imagined folks rolling through the woods or desert, slowly, admiring the beauty…lol……then the onslaught of bikers, more like dirt motorcycle riders….my buddy Ward Rolance got run over by a bike on a Boulder Mountain trail…hit and run……..it all went downhill from there…

  2. June 1, 2021 at 10:19 am

    Amen, Prophet Jim. I still wonder if by painting desert landscapes, am I creating eco-porn? I choose to believe that I am celebrating the land I love, but there’s no point in failing to think about it. Ultimately, the juggernaut that is Homo sapiens will overrun everything on the planet, already has in so many places. “Our” West is now mostly an imaginary place, a memory to be treasured. I got a glimpse of the former West a few years ago driving highway 6 across Nevada. Ah, the sweet emptiness, endless skies and open road!

  3. Lee Nellis
    June 1, 2021 at 2:26 pm

    Some things age well. Thanks for reprinting this.

  4. June 1, 2021 at 4:59 pm

    “We can’t begin to see that the Real Enemy is the face we see in the mirror every day of our lives. Humans and their toys…What a deadly combination.” Not all of us. I’ve heard too many pious fake eviros who wouldn’t put their running shoes on the ground to stop the trashing of the San Francisco Peaks here in Flagstaff say piously, “I know I’m part of the problem, but…” Inevitably, the but is followed by some spacey antiquated New Age blather about “living now” or “life is to be enjoyed” or “bbut it makes me happy to do whatever annihilating thing it is that I’m doing.”
    I’m not the enemy. I’m one of the avengers. Hayduchess

  5. Bob Krantz
    June 5, 2021 at 9:43 am

    In one of my favorite movies, Local Hero, a fictional fantasy about an oil company buying a picturesque village in Scotland, one of the characters says, “you can’t eat scenery”.

    But we have figured out how to turn scenery into income. Unfortunately, that means the buyers have to come in person. Unlike selling uranium or beef, where locals created a product and sent it away to market, tourism requires customers to come to the source. As Jim has pointed out, the impact of tourists on the land can be just as bad as cattle, but the impact on the life in town is much more significant.

    As always, the enemy is us. Anyone who lives in a small town in the west, and needs to earn a living, has to have both product and customers. Maybe we can figure out another way to sell scenery that does not require the buyer to see it in person.

  6. Steve Moore
    June 5, 2021 at 10:36 pm

    Industrial recreation was around before bikes and Outside Magazine, try untangling a knot of what looked like copulating jeeps on Elephant Hill or at Angel Arch Easter weekend, while a drill rig was at the mouth of Davis Canyon and Jim Watt was pushing for a railroad down the river from Moab to bury nuclear waste under the permanent man camp in Lockhart Basin. Having lived in man camps and boom towns, and worked in oil fields, on off-shore rigs, and around coal and moly mines, I was aware of what kind of change would likely happen to the local communities, and most distressing to me, Needles, Beef Basin, Dark Canyon, et al. That threat could lead a person manning the beer can of an I.S. to pad the guest book with comments by Honest Ozzie and Marvin Gardens in opposition to such activities. Survey stakes made pretty good kindling, and if a person was fresh out of Karo, they could just be creative.
    It was a trade off, only not for the devil we knew, but for the one we didn’t.

  7. Thomas Patton
    June 14, 2021 at 9:12 am

    The enemy IMO is us in varying degrees. Hikers, bikers<jeepers<UTVers.

  8. Spencer Goodro
    June 20, 2021 at 12:34 am

    Hubris. Pictures taken from space illustrate the smash and grab destruction of he wild places around Moab. Wild places, once tamed, can never be restored.
    “I am not an atheist but an earthiest. Be true to the earth.” E. A.

  9. Bob Krantz
    June 20, 2021 at 6:48 pm

    In my lifetime, the population of the US has doubled. The populations in Utah and Colorado have increased by a factor of four. And while I can’t find statistics, I will wager the percent of people who take tourist vacations to places like Moab and who engage in outdoor adventure recreation have also increased significantly. Finally, add a multiplier for the tendency of people to visit the same places, because those places are both attractive and popular, and we end up with tens if not hundreds of times more people in some places today compared to the 1950s.

    There is no going back, aside from apocalyptic sci-fi fantasies. Maybe the best we can do now is find some place not quite as attractive and much less known, and then not tell anyone.

    BTW, when teaching geology back in May I have never seen such human insanity in and around Moab. For the first time I can recall, it seemed like anywhere flat within 20 miles of town was occupied by campers and RVs, including more than one planted in front of a “No Camping” sign.

  10. Bob Phillips
    July 4, 2021 at 4:00 pm

    Thanks for the great–and still totally relevant–article, Jim. Also, I agree pretty much with the comments of others. My first conscious experience with this issue was when I and three college friends went to backpack in Havasu Canyon Memorial Day weekend in 1972. I had backpacked there on Memorial Day weekend 1965 with the Boy Scouts (Arizona, dads and sons, not religious like in Utah) and didn’t think it would have changed much in seven years back then. Boy, was I wrong–it had become a zoo and a much degraded experience. A harbinger of what’s happening all over.

  11. July 5, 2021 at 3:21 pm

    Oreegonians once created a bumper sticker: “Welcome to Oregon; now go home.” It’s time for Flagstaff and Moab to have those. Looks like I may have to take it into my own hands….

    • Jim Stiles
      July 5, 2021 at 3:24 pm

      It’s too late for either… the only strategy left is to make some effort to save the next target of the New West. The targets so far left relatively untouched. And how do you organize such an effort when just mentioning such a place is like the kiss of death?

  12. July 20, 2021 at 10:19 am

    … and? it (how/so/whut evvr you de-fine it) is … still … “out there”. it’z jest a liddul phurthur uh-weigh ~

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