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Wildfires Recovery Seedlings
In this photo provided by the The Nature Conservancy, volunteers and members of the Hermit's Peak Watershed Alliance plant seedlings on the Hermit's Peak/Calf Canyon Fire burn scar near Mora, N.M., Saturday, Sept. 21, 2024. Pictured is Estevan Gonzales, left, giving instructions to volunteers Crystal K. Western Ford, center, and Star Ford. (Roberto E. Rosales/The Nature Conservancy via AP)

Volunteers help seedlings take root as New Mexico attempts to recover from historic wildfire

Volunteers spent a few hours scrambling across fire-ravaged mountainsides Saturday, planting hundreds of seedlings

By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN
Published - Sep 23, 2024, 05:50 PM ET
Last Updated - Dec 16, 2024, 06:59 PM EST

A small team of volunteers spent a few hours scrambling across fire-ravaged mountainsides, planting hundreds of seedlings as part of a monumental recovery effort that has been ongoing following the largest wildfire in New Mexico’s recorded history.

The Hermit's Peak/Calf Canyon blaze was spawned in 2022 by a pair of botched prescribed burns that federal forest managers intended to lessen the threat of catastrophic fire in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. Instead, large swaths of northern New Mexico were reduced to ash and rural communities were upended.

It rained overnight, making for perfect conditions for the volunteers in the mountains near the community of Mora. It was just enough to soften the ground for the group's shovels on Saturday.

“The planting was so easy that we got done a little early and ran out of trees to plant that day. So it was a good day,” said David Hernandez, a stewardship ecologist with The Nature Conservancy, which is partnering with the Hermit's Peak Watershed Alliance on the project.

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