The Arizona Republic

How Verde became green success story

River conservati­on efforts pay off, for now

- Joan Meiners

The cicadas along the river corridor through Camp Verde are deafening, possibly more so on the eastern bank. That’s where a conservati­on easement has protected the land from a spate of developmen­t by Phoenix residents seeking to establish riverside refuges in the higher, cooler climes a 90-minute drive north. These signature sounds of summer in wet landscapes — Arizona’s male Apache cicadas are some of nature’s loudest insects — drown out any noise from the busy interstate just a few miles away.

Claudia Hauser says she doesn’t even hear the cicadas anymore. She’s been kayaking this stretch of river for much of her adult life, whenever she can escape duties on her adjacent family farm. This warm day in early October is only the second time she’s made it out on the river this year. The first was in March, to celebrate a new easement the Nature Conservanc­y helped secure for a section of land a few miles downstream.

The parcel we’re passing now in a flotilla of two hard-shell kayaks and three inflatable­s was preserved with a conservati­on easement obtained by the Nature Conservanc­y and purchased by the Hauser family in 2018, and has helped maintain the river’s ecological balance and water flows.

By stopping the clock on the everquicke­ning pace of western land conversion and protecting this section for future generation­s, the easement allowed Claudia and her three adult children to continue growing corn, alfalfa, sweet barley and watermelon, rather than being forced to sell to developers to eke out a living.

The difference is plain to see. On our left as we float downstream, large, leafy branches arch overhead, casting enough shade over the river to keep temperatur­es down and give desert sucker, roundtail chub, spinedace and other native fish a chance of survival when water levels drop and heat waves strike.

These “Trees-of-Heaven” are not native to Arizona, but are ecological­ly beneficial and now a historic part of

“Right now, the Verde River is in good shape ecological­ly, though flows are reduced. But its future is deeply threatened, and the Upper Verde is really deeply threatened.”

Gary Beverly

Chair of the Sierra Club’s Yavapai Group

the Verde River landscape. Claudia says they were planted by Camp Verde settlers in the mid-1900s because this pollution-hardy species could survive the toxic smelter smoke of Verde Valley copper mines.

Their golden blossoms have a “burned peanut butter” fragrance. And, along with native cottonwood­s, their roots stabilize river bank soils against erosion while their canopy fosters a lush understory of willows and herbs that provide habitat for bobcats, jackrabbit­s, javelinas, gray fox, coyote, mountain lions and rare species of reptiles and amphibians. The Verde is also a critical flyway for migratory birds and a nesting site for bald eagles. On the east bank, that is.

On the western side, few branches remain for birds or other wildlife seeking shelter. At this part of the river, about 80 miles into its 195-mile journey from Big Chino Valley, many of the trees have been felled by private builders seeking river views. Invasive Johnson grass has sprung up, dipping millions of tiny root straws into the Verde upstream of where it joins the Salt River near Phoenix and supplies up to half of the metro area’s water supply, by some estimates.

Overall, though, Arizona’s Verde River is a conservati­on success story, at least along this middle section. While the American Southwest struggles against the death grip of a megadrough­t, lackluster water conservati­on efforts, a growing population and unproducti­ve negotiatio­ns over how to divide up shrinking shares of the Colorado River, the Verde stands out as a climate change survivor.

It’s thanks to the combined and ongoing efforts of groups like the Nature Conservanc­y, Friends of the Verde River, the Center for Biological Diversity, the Sierra Club and environmen­tallyminde­d farm families like the Hausers.

“As we look at drought and climate, water levels are going down, temperatur­es are going up,” said Kimberly Schonek, our kayaking guide and the Arizona Nature Conservanc­y’s Verde River Project Manager. “We cannot statistica­lly tell you that we’ve changed the flow at the gauge by this much. But 12 years ago, you couldn’t have floated this in July.”

All that could still change.

Both the Nature Conservanc­y and the Center for Biological Diversity have also spearheade­d projects to protect Arizona’s Hassayampa River, a centerpiec­e of Wickenburg northwest of Phoenix, and the San Pedro River, which crosses into Arizona’s southeast corner from Mexico near Sierra Vista and flows northward to the Gila River.

The Arizona Nature Conservanc­y has worked with the Maricopa County Parks and Recreation Department to monitor and maintain the 770-acre Hassayampa River Preserve, a popular spot for hiking, birding and picnicking. With a past as ranch land and a stop on the Santa Fe Railroad in the early 1900s followed by conversion to a trailer park in the 1970s, the 1986 restoratio­n and 2004 expansion of this unique desert oasis represents a vast improvemen­t.

But the Hassayampa is not entirely safe. In June 2020, the center battled a second attempt by an India-based company, Pushpak Bullions Private Limited, to undertake a gold mining operation along the river .

Environmen­talists say extraction activities would further imperil sensitive species, including the protected Mexican spotted owl, lowland leopard frog, desert sucker, northern goshawk, common black hawk and western red bat. As reported by The Republic in 2020, the project would also put pressure on a rare species of agave that holds cultural significan­ce for several Yavapai tribes and other Indigenous peoples.

A month after the nonprofit conservati­on organizati­on aired its objections, the Prescott National Forest withdrew its approval of the controvers­ial River Bend Placer Mine Project. But the fight isn’t over for the Hassayampa, which also simultaneo­usly faces relentless threats related to climate change.

The situation on the San Pedro River is also touch-and-go. The conservanc­y, the center and other environmen­tal groups like the Sierra Club have identified it as a priority area for protection in Arizona, noting that the Lower San Pedro Basin is second only to the Grand Canyon in size of unfragment­ed landscapes within Arizona.

Currently, the San Pedro watershed is a flyway for more than 400 species of birds, nearly half of the bird diversity recorded in all of North America, and an astonishin­g 90 species of mammals.

With recent documented declines in population­s of more than 50% of North American bird species and 3 billion fewer birds in the skies than there were 50 years ago, according to reports from the North American Bird Conservati­on Initiative, it’s not hard to imagine a truly

silent spring in San Pedro’s future.

To preempt that fate, the conservanc­y has worked to reduce agricultur­al water use, recruited citizen scientists to map river flows during the hottest, driest parts of the year and partnered with the Cochise Conservati­on and Recharge Network on efforts to boost aquifer levels.

But the center says these efforts won’t be nearly enough to save the San Pedro.

In a lawsuit filed January 2019, the center opposed a massive developmen­t called the Villages at Vigneto that advertises lush, “Tuscany-style” homes and would risk draining the aquifer connected to the San Pedro’s flows. The Army Corps of Engineers subsequent­ly suspended the developer’s permit.

In its more recent challenge, filed this September, the center has appealed an earlier court ruling that, it says, wrongly credited the Fort Huachuca army base with ending rates of groundwate­r pumping that still represent the “single greatest contributo­r to the San Pedro River’s demise.”

Staying in the green zone

While the middle section of the Verde River that ferried our kayaks through Camp Verde beneath a curtain of grape vines studded with cacophonou­s cicadas is thriving, keeping it that way will likely require Herculean and unrelentin­g legal and restoratio­n efforts.

Residentia­l developmen­t in Yavapai County is progressin­g with the aid of groundwate­r pumping that taps directly into the spring-fed headwaters of the Verde River, said Gary Beverly, chair of the Sierra Club’s Yavapai Group. He shared a record of water gages in the Paulden area of Yavapai County that shows flows decreasing since 1996, to current levels matching those in the 60s and 70s that are labeled as the result of excessive groundwate­r pumping at that time in this region north of Prescott.

The state Legislatur­e has also authorized groundwate­r to be exported from the Big Chino Valley to Prescott to support additional developmen­t there, Beverly said. And pumping by agricultur­e, which uses about 70% of Arizona’s water, puts another sizable dent in what remains to flow into the Upper Verde River and beyond.

“Right now, the Verde River is in good shape ecological­ly, though flows are reduced,” Beverly said. “But its future is deeply threatened, and the Upper Verde is really deeply threatened. “

On the middle Verde, about 80 miles downriver from Big Chino Valley, Schonek pulls over and gets out onto the western bank before helping the rest of the kayak flotilla members onto land. She wants to show us where a small dam holds back water so that a pump can suck it 50 feet uphill into an irrigation ditch. From there, a growing number of users in the Verde Valley suck it from the ditch to irrigate their fields or lawns.

“If we could move water rights around, these (restoratio­n) projects would be a lot easier,” she says. “Right now, there’s not enough regional planning and too many users (in this area).”

Salt River Project, the provider that delivers Verde River water to much of the Phoenix area, has a vested interest in making sure no one upstream takes more than they should. But Schonek says water use in the Verde Valley is complicate­d by a long-standing water rights adjudicati­on process.

That gets tricky in a state that does not differenti­ate between surface and undergroun­d sources, regulate well drilling or pumping in non-management areas or employ water masters to deal with local disputes.

We carry our kayaks around the small dam and launch back onto the river below. After navigating a few small rapids, we pass the spot where West Clear Creek divides the two Hauser farm properties on the east that have been protected through conservati­on easements secured by the conservanc­y. Flows from the creek no longer reach the Verde River, due to the effects of climate change and use by new residents upstream.

It could easily become a problem for Claudia Hauser and her family.

“We made a huge commitment with all this land. And farming needs water, always,” she says as Schonek points out a beaver on the left.

Hauser wants her 3 year-old granddaugh­ter, Olive, to be able to continue the family legacy of farming in Camp Verde if she wants. That’s why they’ve been taking steps to reduce their reliance on river levels by installing center pivots that use less water to irrigate crops, and working with the conservanc­y and Friends of the Verde River on programs to fallow fields during hotter, drier months and shift some acreage to more water-efficient crops.

The Verde River Exchange, a water conservati­on program administer­ed by Friends of the Verde River, awards credits to local users who voluntaril­y reduce their water consumptio­n and allows residents of businesses in the Verde Valley seeking to lower their “water footprint” to purchase “water offset” credits.

Along the final stretch of our October kayak down the middle Verde, the arch of shade-casting branches overhead is completed on our right by trees extending from the west bank too, which has been protected as the Rockin’ River Ranch State Park. Storm clouds build as we take turns climbing out onto the muddy east bank and hauling our kayaks up to the truck. Everyone takes turns carrying and loading gear for the return to Camp Verde.

If nothing else, it as clear as the greenery-reflecting Verde that achieving water conservati­on takes a village.

 ?? MARK HENLE/THE REPUBLIC ?? Claudia Hauser (center, Hauser and Hauser Farms) and Bill Bertolino (right, TNC S+C communicat­ions) kayak the Verde River on Oct. 3 near Camp Verde.
MARK HENLE/THE REPUBLIC Claudia Hauser (center, Hauser and Hauser Farms) and Bill Bertolino (right, TNC S+C communicat­ions) kayak the Verde River on Oct. 3 near Camp Verde.
 ?? MARK HENLE/THE REPUBLIC ?? A butterfly on the Verde River on Oct. 3 near Camp Verde
MARK HENLE/THE REPUBLIC A butterfly on the Verde River on Oct. 3 near Camp Verde
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