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Big Hatchet Peak

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Big Hatchet Peak
Big Hatchet Peak viewed from the west
Highest point
Elevation8,359 ft (2,548 m) NAVD 88[1]
Prominence3,696 ft (1,127 m)[1]
Coordinates31°38′08″N 108°23′55″W / 31.6356574°N 108.3986525°W / 31.6356574; -108.3986525[2]
Geography
Big Hatchet Peak is located in New Mexico
Big Hatchet Peak
Big Hatchet Peak
Parent rangeBig Hatchet Mountains
Topo mapUSGS Big Hatchet Peak
Climbing
Easiest routeHike

Big Hatchet Peak is the high point of the Big Hatchet Mountains,[3] a small but rugged range in the southwest corner (the "Bootheel") of New Mexico, in the United States. The mountains are located in southeast Hidalgo County, about 50 miles (80 km) southwest of Deming. The range runs roughly northwest-southeast, and is about 12 miles (19 km) long; the southeastern edge of the range is within 3.5 miles (6 km) of the border with Mexico. They lie primarily on BLM land.

The peak rises steeply out of the Playas Valley, to the west, and the Hachita Valley, to the east of the range. The summit stands about 4,000 feet above the valley floors. Also, the north and west faces of the peak are particularly steep, making for an impressive mountain. There are a few other minor summits in this small range, but most are not named, except for Zeller Peak two miles north, and New Well Peak with a summit elevation of 6,284 feet (1,915 m)[4] and which anchors the southeast end of the mountains.[5]

Geologically this range is part of the Basin and Range Province which spans much of the southwestern U.S. and parts of northern Mexico. It is a fault-block range made up of Paleozoic limestone and Cretaceous shale and sandstones.[6]

Ecologically, the Big Hatchet Mountains lie near the Chihuahuan Desert and the Sonoran Desert, but their large relief provides many ecological niches more in keeping with the mountains to the north. Notable inhabitants include bats, raptors, bighorn sheep, and javelina.[6]

The Big Hatchet Mountains are far from population centers, and have no paved road access or developed recreation sites; they therefore see little recreational activity. However the standard route on the peak, along the South Ridge from Thompson Canyon, is straightforward.

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Transcription

Mike Basich was a snowboarding pioneer. But after hundreds of competitions that brought money and fame, he went in search of something different. [ROCK MUSIC PLAYING] Welcome. Thank you. It's such a rush just to get up here. [MUSIC PLAYING] When did you first get into snowboarding? My mom was always looking for something different and fun for us to try out, so that's how we discovered it. And the sport had no rules. And that's where-- that kept us in it, because no one was telling us what to do. Oh! Ouch! From 7 to about 14 years old, I had epilepsy. And so being different than everyone else, you felt at home. That's something my parents drove into me every day, saying it's OK to be different. I just tackle things that way. [MUSIC PLAYING] Well, welcome. Wow. This is the inside. It's beautiful. How long did it take for you to build this place? It took me five years-- two and a half years to do all the rock work. I think I moved about 175 ton of rock. Every piece of cement was hand mixed, and gathered the water for it by hand, as well. God, it's such a labor of love. You get to do fun things. This is actually a shower here. And it's a seat in the daytime. But you get to use-- it's a bit camping style. No shower curtain, just out in the open. Pouring water, sitting down. [MUSIC PLAYING] I've got a little oven, which the door's from the junkyard. And bought a nice little fireplace, which is my cooking, heating water, warming the place. So that's the central attention for the utilities. Yeah. This is it. Where are you getting your water? Yeah, this is creek water, which I have two creeks on the property. Mike, where do you sleep? I've got the loft as my bedroom-- very different than anywhere else I've lived. I go to bed with the sun, and I wake up with it. I don't feel like I'm trying to race time. In a city, you always feel like you're on a rat race. And here, it feels like you're in sync with what's actually happening. So this was your dream. Since you were a little boy, you've been wanting to do this. This is my dream and reality, 40 acres to do whatever I want with. It's really fun. [MUSIC PLAYING] Tell me when you first started getting into that competitive circuit. Competitive circuit was right off the start. The World Cup, traveled the world a bunch-- I'd be in a different country almost every weekend. Worked my body hard. I was making about $170,000 a year. Played it pretty smart. I bought my first house, 4,000 square-foot house-- huge-- because I went for the American dream. I bought the big house and had a fancy car. It didn't do anything different for me. It just took up time. We started getting sponsors that didn't have anything to do with snowboarding. You started dealing with people that didn't really care about your imagination. I let go of the competition 15 years ago, at least. I do a lot through photography through snowboarding, so that's been my outlet versus the competition. And that's how I end up in the back country. [MUSIC PLAYING] Where did the decision come from to build this place off the grid? Nature inspires me, and that's why I choose this kind of environment. I want to learn how to live off the grid, have appreciation for nature, and how to keep the rain off my head, stay warm. Wow. This is breathtaking. This glass is definitely a heating tool for me. It faces south, so it's a great space to have that much glass. Not a bad view. [LAUGHTER] Not a bad way to wake up. This is the great outdoors. [LAUGHTER] I got a chairlift over here that's super fun to ride. You built that? Yeah, it took me about eight months with some friends. You get to ride all this terrain here, which is super fun. This is your giant playground right here. Yeah, this is my own private resort. There's a water source on this pillar, water falls into the hot tub. So you don't have a toilet in your house, but you have a hot tub. Yep. [LAUGHTER] [MUSIC PLAYING] How did you come up with the design for the home? The design's built on the golden ratio. Building under that law of nature is supposed to make the space feel more fit to the body. This one is a pentagon, which if you connect all those dots, you get a star. And that's what the star you saw on the window represents. It casts a shadow on the floor, which is another smaller pentagon. And they all meet at 3:02 on my birthday. That was how it all came down to a personal building for me. I've ended up here off the road, off the beaten trail, and loving it. I like to think of it as getting back to the basics of humanity. I like feeling connected to the Earth more than I could with a 4,000 square-foot house. So it gave me the strength of doing everything myself, and the lessons, and a childhood dream that I wanted to fulfill. And that's what this project of this house was about, was to fulfill a childhood dream. In the next episode of "Going Off Grid," we meet a family that left everything behind. We carry water for the shower, just like we carry everything, in a basin. And we heat up water on the propane torch, mix that together with cold water until we have the temperature right. And then that mix , we'll run through a hose downhill to the shower. "Going Off Grid" is a part of "Seeker Stories." To see all the stories we post here, be sure to subscribe. Thanks for watching.

Gallery

Big Hatchet Peak from the northeast

References

  1. ^ a b "Big Hatchet Peak, New Mexico". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2012-09-30.
  2. ^ "Big Hatchet Peak". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2012-09-30.
  3. ^ Julyan, Robert (2006). The Mountains of New Mexico. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. p. 260. ISBN 978-0826335166.
  4. ^ "New Well Peak". ListsOfJohn.com. Retrieved 2014-02-11.
  5. ^ "Map showing the Big Big Hatchet Range". Acme Mapper. Retrieved 2014-02-10.
  6. ^ a b Butterfield, Mike, and Greene, Peter, Mike Butterfield's Guide to the Mountains of New Mexico, New Mexico Magazine Press, 2006, ISBN 978-0-937206-88-1

External links

This page was last edited on 6 September 2022, at 11:17
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