69°F
weather icon Mostly Clear

Boulder City: A little piece of Heaven?

There is a hidden valley of verdant splendor in the McCullough Mountains. When I moved to Boulder City in 1981, one of the things on my to-do list was explore the McCullough Mountains.

In 1981, I quickly realized my Toyota Tercel, even though it was a four-wheel-drive, was not going to deliver me in one piece through the wash that runs down from the valley. It was an El Nino year, like 2023 is turning out to be.

I found that I needed an off-road SUV to enjoy the mountains and deserts of Nevada which I have explored over the years, finding singular black rocks with petroglyphs on them, an abundance of chalcedony, as well as human occupation - sites in the El Dorado Valley which now have a mirage of water created by the presence of solar panels. Off the road a bit are canyons with petroglyphs.

The dry lakebed was at one time so beautiful when it was a resplendent reflection of the McCullough Mountains created by the winter rains during El Niño years.

I’ve climbed to McCullough Peak from the other side of the mountains. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to have a trail to the top of the mountains beginning at the end of the El Dorado paved road that connects many of the solar sites in the valley? The peak is over 7,000 feet, often creating the convective thunderheads of the monsoon season.

Have you visited Keyhole Canyon or Grapevine Canyon, now in the Avi Kwa Ame National Monument? They demonstrate the occupation of the area long ago by Native Americans. They were likely a simpler consciousness, more third-ray. I used to decorate the junipers in Christmas Tree Pass at Christmastime. I’ll bet that the Park Service from Spirit Mountain National Monument will disallow any further decoration of those trees on the way to Grapevine Canyon. Perhaps they will hold a seasonal ceremony with the Native American tribes?

Water is so rare in the desert that a wet spring always brings beauty to the desert, doesn’t it? My parents took me hiking in the beautiful places of America, so I readily enjoyed the beauty of the Mojave Desert. It is most resplendent in the spring when there has been rain from the fall to the summer.

I camped in an Arizona canyon in one such June when I witnessed a rainbow arching over the canyon as I drove home down a valley. I enjoyed bighorn sheep walking through that valley. I’ve seen a mother coyote running with her cubs down that valley when the spring yellow wildflowers have a special aroma. Perhaps that happened this year since we had an abundant amount of rainfall in the desert surrounding Boulder City?

The Rocky Mountains had an above-normal snowpack this year, didn’t they? I just returned from Durango, Colorado where I saw the Animas River, flowing into the San Juan River, finally traversing into the mighty Colorado River. It is mighty once again this year isn’t it? According to the Bureau of Reclamation in May, Lake Powell is receiving an incredible 77,000 cubic feet per second (CFS) as the unregulated inflow of the Colorado making Lake Powell water levels rise higher than they were at this time last year! That is great news for those who follow the lake forecasts, isn’t it? Those water levels have been falling for nearly 20 years.

I rafted the Colorado from Moab through Cataract Canyon leading to Lake Powell in July 2001 when the river had only 5,000 CFS. The raft bounced over a rapid so violently that I was thrown into the river. That was a thrill! Water, rising in Lake Powell or Mead is gorgeous for those of us who have been here long enough to remember the year 1983.

That year, water spilled from the spillways of Glen Canyon and Hoover dams, didn’t it? In talking to Robert Broadbent, Boulder City’s first mayor, who later became the commissioner of Reclamation, he told me that was the most “terrifying professional experience” he ever had since the agency was frightened that Glen Canyon Dam would fall into the Colorado River since the spillway tunnels sprayed water for days, cavitating huge caverns in the spillways of the dam. That hasn’t happened since, has it?

New life is always spectacular in the desert, isn’t it? New life arises from the rains, doesn’t it? What new life is arising from the heart of Boulder City? Enjoy love this year with your loved ones in the beautiful desert and mountains surrounding Boulder City, Nevada!

Eric Lundgaard is the former mayor of Boulder City and currently the president of the Aquarian Theosophy Foundation.

THE LATEST
Alumni events, marriage and a real Nazi

Ron’s column from a few weeks ago inspired me to tell a story about a weird event from my past. Mine is not as exciting as his in that there is no wrestler named Silo Sam. But there is at least one Nazi. And, no, not the current “I disagree with your politics so you are a Nazi” version. An actual card-carrying member of the party.

Las Vegas Veterans’ Memorial to Boulder City?

Veterans’ memorials can be found all over the Silver State. They are well deserved. They honor individuals who served the nation, and also commemorate battles and events regarding the many military anniversaries in Nevada.

City manager bids fond farewell

I may be leaving Boulder City, but it was not an easy decision. From the first time I came in and met the staff and community leaders, I saw a city filled with people who truly care about where they live and work. I am grateful for the opportunities I have had to work with some incredible people.

Is the grass always greener?

Many people in the past played a golf game to cement a business deal, didn’t they? They also played golf to socialize. Has Boulder City recognized lessening play on golf courses? Or, from another perspective, what happens when million-dollar homes are placed around our open space golf course with views of the McCullough Mountains? Do fewer people play golf on the Boulder Creek golf course?

Parting is such sweet sorrow

Shakespeare was the man when it came to comedy and tragedy. His ability to make people feel the intense emotions of the characters is still imitated today. The past few months have been filled with a bit of excited anticipation at City Hall as several longtime and high-level employees have found new roles in other acts. I’m here to borrow some Shakespearean lines, the first being from Ophelia, “We know what we are, but know not what we may be.” (Hamlet)

Me, my brother and Silo Sam

Recently, I’ve been enjoying watching shows on A&E related to professional wrestling back in the earlier days, with profiles on wrestlers I grew up watching as well as classic rivalries.

Let’s talk about the ‘D Word’

OK, as a starting point, I must note that it’s weird to think that I might be writing something that would put me in agreement with the Language Police.

Make a new plan, Stan

A plan is a method for achieving a desirable objective. It’s a program of action, usually memorialized in writing. Plans start with goals and ideas. But ideas alone (even good ones) don’t constitute a plan.

Time to recognize unsung heroes

We have so many functions within the Boulder City Police Department, from school resource officers to road patrol to the detective bureau. The work that they do keeps Boulder City among the “Safest Cities in Nevada” (newhomesource.com, alarm.com) year after year. One unit is the backbone of our public safety response: Public Safety Dispatchers.

Honoring National Public Health Week

In my eight decades of this amazing life, I have worn a great many hats: son, brother, father, major (USAF), grandfather, council member, state representative, state senator.