Phones turn Idaho cowboys into 'voice on the mountain'
It's a place where sudden summertime windstorms howl in from the broiling lava fields of eastern Oregon, bringing with them dry lightning that can ignite fast-moving wildfires on sage-and-juniper hillsides. Unchecked, they could quickly turn Silver City's historic wooden buildings to ash.
This spring, Nettleton and six other Owyhee County ranchers who make their livelihoods in some of America's most remote backcountry, began carrying satellite telephones provided by the federal Bureau of Land Management and the Idaho Bureau of Homeland Security.
It's an effort to turn men whose ranching families have been wedded to this land for more than a century into a high-tech advance guard against wildfires that just a year ago devastated millions of acres in Idaho.
"Minutes count in that country," a mustachioed Nettleton told The Associated Press one recent morning after parking his four-wheeler outside the town's 145-year-old Idaho Hotel. "Right now, it's pretty quiet. But it'll come."
Residents who call Silver City home during the summer feel a little safer, knowing Nettleton is always connected to one of 66 satellites from Iridium Satellite LLC, based in Bethesda, Md., hurtling through space, not just the earthbound cell tower on nearby War Eagle Mountain that's often blocked by the region's terrain.
"He's kind of our voice on the mountain," said Jim Hyslop, who helps run the local Silver City Fire and Rescue and has family roots here dating to 1916.
After nearly eight years of uninterrupted drought, ample snowfall and spring rains in 2008 left much of Owyhee County's high country greener than normal this year, meaning fire danger has been limited. Those typical summer storms with dry lightning and sudden gales haven't materialized, either; the ranchers have yet to use their new phones.
Comments
- Death penalty rare in military 12:50 p.m.
- Veterans Day in Afghanistan 12:49 p.m.
- Stocks edge higher as dollar slides 12:45 p.m.
- Elder Andersen to Caribbean Area 12:38 p.m.
- Ogden Regional to host charity run 12:25 p.m.
- Police probe synagogue vandalism 12:15 p.m.
- Williams' back 'worse,' Price out 12:07 p.m.
- Guilty plea in pharmacy scheme 12:04 p.m.
- Will state consider gay rights law? 12:03 p.m.
- Prep football: Felt's Facts Week 11:03 a.m.
- SLC council OKs gay rights policies
- Pratt pleads not guilty to sex charges
- Utah Jazz have a problem at point
- 'Love story' of crash victim ends
- Utah group finds homes for orphans
- Wyoming writer amazed by BYU
- Hair-pulling raises more questions
- 12 Utes return to Texas
- Y. tight ends talented tandem
- Cougars' defensive hoops clinic
- House passes health care bill
268 - TCU showdown has big implications
188 - Lobo suspended
185 - Senators want food tax restored
157 - Cougars crush hapless Cowboys
155 - SLC council OKs gay rights policies
133 - Utah Jazz fall apart against Kings
131 - TCU 4th in AP poll; U. 16th, Y. 22nd
119 - No 'backlash' for pioneers, gays analogy
108 - S.L. vote pending on gay protections
106
Maybe someone out there can help me understand how raising the state...
No shooters.
Having lost my own father to such a demise, I can say that it's something of...
My Ute-little brother always whines and complains about teams that are better...
TV vs DIXIE or SPRINGVILLE (TV by 40 pts.) MC vs DIXIE or SPRINGVILLE...
I just have couple of a simple questions that I have never seen the answer...
Does Brems pay back the $150,000 severance packcage he received two years...
"Its Tearing up our country | 11:18 a.m." I thought it was ironic that you...
"How can you regulate this ordinance? If I fired a gay person because he is a...
The Utes are so amazing they can win all their games even with a new QB.
I bet not one of the posters or even readers of this article have been out in...



You can be the first to comment on this story.