SUBSCRIBE |   | Why we charge
about Albuquerque, New Mexico     Contact Us
 
 

 
 
Home   News   Schools   Sports   Biz   Opinion   Health   Scitech  Arts   Dining   Movies   Outdoors   Weather   Comics   Archives Enhanced Classifieds NM Jobs Cars Real Estate  
 




 

Story Tools
 E-mail Story
 Print Friendly

    

          Front Page  news  state




New Mexico Forest Closes Area To Target Shooting

By Susan Montoya Bryan
Associated Press
      
    GLORIETA MESA — Freida was always there to greet them at the gate. So when the German shepherd was a no-show, Antonio and Eleanor Gonzales knew something wasn't right.
    There was no sign of her along the dirt road to their home and the front stoop was bare when they pulled up. A search ensued, and it wasn't long before they found her dead just beyond the tree line not far from the gate. She had been shot.
    The Gonzaleses say it could have been them. Or worse, it could have been one of their children.
    "We have bullet holes in our fences where we have our signs. You can see where they've shot at them with shotguns,'' says Eleanor Gonzales, 51. "It's so close to us that we can hear the bullets whizzing by.''
    Just over the hill from their home is a clearing at the edge of the Santa Fe National Forest. Broken beer bottles, shotgun shells, bullet casings and cardboard targets litter the ground — not unlike other spots on public land in the West where recreational target shooting has gotten out of hand.
    This spot has been a favorite for years — that is, until the Forest Service decided recently to close more than 2,500 acres on Glorieta Mesa to target shooting due to concerns raised by residents. The shooting seems to have escalated in recent years.
    "It's just a safety issue that needs to be looked after and not trying to do anything about it isn't smart,'' Santa Fe Forest Supervisor Daniel Jiron says.
    Officials elsewhere in New Mexico and in other states have been forced to take similar steps, closing thousands of acres to recreational shooting as more people move West and communities spread into the wilderness.
    The entire Sandia Ranger District, which borders New Mexico's largest city, is off limits to shooting as is part of Lefthand Canyon outside of Boulder, Colo. Parts of the Tonto National Forest in Arizona and the Cleveland National Forest in Southern California are closed to target shooting.
    But gun enthusiasts are concerned that closing public land to recreational shooting will leave them with nowhere to go.
    They point out that target shooting — as long as it doesn't pose a threat to lives or property — is a legitimate recreational activity in forests and on other public lands — just like hiking, horseback riding or fishing.
    Andrew Arulanandam, a spokesman for the National Rifle Association in Washington, D.C., blames urban sprawl and politics for the demise of some gun ranges in the West. He pointed to the closures of the Index Sportsmen's Club on the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest in Washington State and the range at the Knoxville Recreational Area in Northern California.
    "There continues to be an effort, an organized effort, to diminish the gun culture in this country,'' Arulanandam said.
    There are some 80 million gun owners in the United States and many of them participate in recreational shooting, according to the NRA.
    The problem, gun enthusiasts say, is that they're being punished for the actions of a minority of irresponsible shooters.
    Adrian Glass, president of the Del Norte Gun Club west of Rio Rancho, N.M., says the club did the responsible thing when homes started to pop up around it. It moved to a 700-acre plot miles west of the city.
    "If you're a responsible person, you really don't want to be shooting in the direction of something you're not willing to destroy,'' he says.
    Antonio Gonzales, 51, couldn't agree more. A gun owner himself, he says he always finds a safe backdrop and checks out his surroundings before setting up for target practice.
    "We shoot all the time but we're responsible shooters,'' he says.
    Leo Hubbard, who lives on Glorieta Mesa not far from the Gonzaleses, feels the same. He's a former competitive shooter who has gone target shooting on the mesa for more than 30 years.
    "Some people really don't understand the safety issue. They don't come out here to be bad people,'' he said. "There's always going to be a percentage of people who are just problems anyway, but a lot of people just don't understand how much they're endangering other people.''
    Hubbard was worried that the Forest Service would have "a knee-jerk reaction'' and close the whole mesa to shooting, but he commended officials for identifying where the problem was. He says some 78,000 acres on the mesa are still open for target shooting.
    Just down the dirt road from the Gonzaleses' gate, the Forest Service has cleaned up most of the trash and posted signs warning visitors that shooting there is off limits.
    But the Gonzaleses are still apprehensive about letting their granddaughter play outside. Some shooters are still taking aim at cardboard targets out in the clearing.
    "It's aggravating,'' Antonio Gonzales says, shaking his head. "It's convenient for them to just cross into the forest land and blast away and who gives a damn who you're affecting. What if it was them and their kids and their backyard?''
    Forest officials say they plan to crack down.
    As for the Gonzaleses, they balk at the idea of moving. Their families have been on the mesa for generations, working the land, raising cattle and watching over the community.
    "The land I live on was homesteaded by my grandfather so it's not like it would be easy to move,'' Eleanor Gonzales says. "It was handed down to me. I'd like to pass it down to my children and my grandchildren.''


Copyright ©2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.