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2022-04-29_PERMIT FILE - C2010089 (11)
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2022-04-29_PERMIT FILE - C2010089 (11)
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Last modified
7/13/2022 5:43:57 PM
Creation date
7/13/2022 5:37:03 PM
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DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C2010089
IBM Index Class Name
PERMIT FILE
Doc Date
4/29/2022
Doc Name
Site Description & Land Use
Section_Exhibit Name
Section 2.04.3
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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Section 2.04.3 Page 9 December 2021 (RN-02) <br />77 and 78 Ustic Torriorthents Pinyon - Juniper 100 300 500 <br />81and 82 Progresso Semi Desert Loam 400 600 800 <br /> <br />All of the lands within the NHN Mine Permit Area are subjected to grazing. According to <br />discussions with Mr. Joe Garvey, the Garvey Brothers put 90 two-year-old heifers on their <br />property on 20 November 2008 and removed them on 10 January. On 1 January 2009 they put <br />200 mother cows on their lands and they were removed on 10 February. On 10 February they put <br />90 head of yearly calves on their land and they stayed until 2 March 2009, when they were <br />removed. Exact dates from previous years were not available with respect to the numbers and <br />dates, cattle were brought onto their land, but Mr. Garvey reports that they have operated using a <br />similar management practice ever since they obtained the property nearly twenty years ago. <br /> <br />On the Glasier and Elk Ridge-Meehan properties, Mr. Preston Carver reports that they typically <br />move their cattle from Third Park to this site usually around the middle of December and leave <br />them on this site until about the end of March. In the fall of 2008, they moved 28 cows, three <br />horses and one crippled bull onto the property during the fourth week of November 2008 and <br />they stayed on the property until the end of March 2009. He states that this stocking rate was <br />similar to what they have done in past years. <br /> <br />With respect to fertilization, Mr. Joe Garvey reports that on 13 March 2009 they applied 250 <br />pounds per acre of 18-46-0 fertilizer containing one half urea. He says that in most years they <br />apply a similar level of fertilizer; however, in some years, as was the case in 2008, fertilizer was <br />so expensive that they did not apply any supplemental fertilizer. <br /> <br />The Garvey’s harvested hay off their property during the third week of June 2009. Mr. Stan <br />Garvey reported that they harvested a total of 127 bales. A total of 45 bales came off the northern <br />most parcel of their land north of the irrigation ditch, 66 bales off the parcel to the south of the <br />irrigation ditch and a total of 16 bales came off the southern most piece of ground, immediately <br />to the west of the brick house. They did not weight their bales, but Mr. Garvey estimates that the <br />bales averaged 1,500 pounds of dry weight per bale. <br /> <br />The extent of the area harvested for hay on the Garvey property is shown on Map 2.04.3-1, New <br />Horizon North Mine Land Use Map. Given the areas of these three tracts, the harvested hay <br />yields equaled 5,931, 5,779 and 3,347 pounds or 2.97, 2.89 and 1.68 tons per acre of partially air <br />dried material per acre on these three parcels respectively. This equates to an average yield of <br />5,339 pounds or 2.67 tons per acre. Mr. Garvey could not remember the number of bales <br />harvested in previous years but believed that it was similar to these yields. <br /> <br />The normal cutting practice for harvesting hay on the Glasier, Elk Ridge-Meehan and Garvey <br />properties is to harvest only one cutting of hay and leave the regrowth as forage for winter
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