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REP41416
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REP41416
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Entry Properties
Last modified
8/25/2016 12:43:16 AM
Creation date
11/27/2007 9:02:02 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1984065
IBM Index Class Name
Report
Doc Date
4/28/1997
Doc Name
IRRIGATED HAYLAND PRODUCTION STANDARD COAL RIDGE 1 MINE C-84-065
From
HAYES ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES INC
To
NRCS
Permit Index Doc Type
REVEG MONITORING REPORT
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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<br />%~ <br />~'~~~~~ <br /> <br />~I•/~~i~n~.n rvil~wlJI9~C.::~l j~7 <br />CIrU~~y~1NnCioh <br />Mr. Dennis Davidson <br />Natural Resource Conservation Service <br />401 23`s St. <br />Glenwood Springs, CO 81601 <br />~~~ ~~~~I~I~~~~~~I~~ <br />March 4, 1997 <br />Matthew S. Hayes <br />Hayes Environmental Services, Inc. <br />300 Lafayette St. <br />Denver, CO 80218 <br />RE: Irrigated Hayland Production standard, Coal Ridge No. 1 Mine (C-84-065) <br />Dear Mr. Davidson: <br />I spoke to you by phone this past December regarding a production standard at the <br />Coal Ridge No. 1 mine site. The mine was permitted in 1984. Areas that are disturbed <br />during mining operations are required by the Colorado Division of Minerals and Geology <br />to be reclaimed to an aceptable condition, generally measured by comparing the reclaimed <br />vegetation with a success standard or a nearby natural reference community. Somehow, <br />in 1984, neither a success standard nor a reference area were agreed upon for the irrigated <br />hayland community at the Coal Ridge mine site. As a result, I am trying to determine a <br />fair standard for the mine to allow a determination of reclamation success to eventually be <br />made. <br />The mine site is located near New Castle, Colorado in Garfield County, and is <br />visible from Highway 70 on the south side. The irrigated hayland community lies in Map <br />12 of the Soil Survey of Rifle Area, Colorado, and within the Storm King quadrangle. <br />According to permit documents and maps, the community is about evenly located within <br />areas mapped as Heldt Silty Clay (6 to 12 % slope) and the Nihill Stony Loam (6 to 25% <br />slope) soil designations. These would correspond to soil types 30 and 47 of the SCS Soil <br />Survey map 12, identified as Heldt clay loam, 6 to 12% slope and Nihill channery loam, 6 <br />to 25% slope respectively in the body of the Soil Survey document (see page 92, Table 4). <br />According to Table 5 of the Soil Survey (p. 94-96, Yields per Acre of Crops and <br />Pasture), yields for these two soil types "expected under a high level of management" <br />would be 3.0 and 2.0 tons per acre of alfalfa hay per year. However, several <br />characteristics of the mine's imgated hayland community are inconsistent with the <br />assumptions of the Table 5. First, the crop planted on the mined area was predominantly <br />of grass species. The seed mix listed in the approved mining permit was as follows <br />(Orchard grass, 5.6 PLS/Acre; Brome grass, 2.4 PLS/Acre; Timothy grass, 3.7 <br />PLS/Acre). The actual seed mix used in the 1994 reclamation may have included alfalfa, <br />though at a rate not greater than 40%. Second, the area will receive an average rather <br />than a high level of management. Finally, production will be estimated during vegetative <br />
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