Lodi News-Sentinel

Feral cattle scare hikers at California park

- By Louis Sahagun

SAND TO SNOW NATIONAL MONUMENT — Sand to Snow National Monument is a quiet place — its mountainou­s high desert and cascading streams a draw for those seeking panoramic views, tranquilit­y and solitude.

But on a recent morning, the serenity was ruined by a menacing bellowing, making it clear passing hikers weren’t alone.

On a ridgeline near a popular stretch of the Pacific Crest Trail, five feral bulls, each the size of a small car, were snorting, stomping and pawing the ground — postures indicating they were ready to charge.

The bulls gazed down on human observers; some lowered their footlong horns. Then they lumbered on, trampling the trail and devouring native vegetation in one of California’s newest national monuments.

Peering through binoculars, Terry Anderson, a board member of the Society for the Conservati­on of Bighorn Sheep, saw a species he doesn’t consider worthy of conservati­on in the wild lands near Palm Springs.

“They are part of a herd of at least 150 that’s ripping up this monument and scaring the heck out of folks who cross paths with them,” he said. “They also can transmit disease to native bighorn sheep. So, they need to be removed — and I’m all for lethal removal. They don’t belong here.”

Signs posted at trailheads warn of an additional danger. A pack of pit bulls has been killing and eating wild cattle in this nature sanctuary framed by mountains and watered year-round by a river roiling through overlappin­g biological zones including sandy desert, boulder fields, grasslands and forests.

Jack Thompson, desert regional director of the adjacent Whitewater Preserve, roughly 10 miles northwest of Palm Springs, was only half-kidding when he said, “It’s Jurassic Park just a two-hour drive east of downtown Los Angeles.”

The conflicts have become a local crisis not just because of the wild cattle and dogs, but also because the number of visitors and hikers in the Mojave Preserve and Sand to Snow National Monument has increased dramatical­ly since it received federal designatio­n in 2016, up from 90,000 to 148,000 last year.

There are cattle, including some that are wild, spread across California’s millions of acres of open lands. But the size of this feral herd and its proximity to one of the most popular wilderness trails in the state make it a vexing problem for federal land managers. Because of a lack of cellphone service in portions of these canyon lands, it wouldn’t be easy to summon help in the event of a stampede or goring.

Conservati­on groups including the Pacific Crest Trail Assn. are urgently calling on federal land managers to take action.

The U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management, which co-manage the monument’s 101,000 acres as wilderness, said they plan in March to dispatch a team of federal land managers, biologists and representa­tives of the nearby Morongo Band of Mission Indians reservatio­n to come up with a strategy and funds to eliminate the unbranded cattle and collarless dogs.

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