Tag: mining and hunting

  • Hercules Again

    Hercules Again

    The image above is of a part of the Bingham Canyon open-pit copper mine in Utah. (Photo courtesy of NASA Earth Observatory, Jesse Allen and Robert Simmon)

    “Can you guarantee this won’t be an open-pit mine?” — Question from attendee at Hercules Metals town hall meeting, Cambridge, ID, May 13, 2026

    “No.” — Chris Paul, CEO of Hercules Metals

    Hercules Metals has expanded its mining exploration on the Cecil Andrus WMA and USFS public lands along Highway 71 west of Cambridge, Idaho. The combination of their leased land on the Andrus WMA and their mining claims on USFS lands to the southwest now runs about 73 kilometers (about 45 miles), on both sides of Highway 71. Hercules is the largest of the six or seven other mining companies with leases and/or claims in the area; numerous others (mostly foreign companies, like Hercules) have begun exploring the “zone,” and off-road equipment, bulldozers, drilling pads, and storage facilities have drastically increased on this important and beautiful section of public land. We didn’t hunt on the east side of 71 last season because of all the drilling and road-making activity, but we observed it from across the canyon on the west side of the road. The disturbance to the area between Brownlee Guard Station and Grade Creek was shocking from a distance. Access by foot up or down Camp Creek, one of our old favorites, is now basically closed as it is the main access point for all of the heavy equipment heading up and down that road.

    What follows is my account of a site visit to the area, an aerial view from a Cessna 210, and the Hercules Town Hall meeting in Cambridge on May 13 of this year.

    On the Ground

    In early May, I had the good fortune to accompany Randy Fox and Jeff Abrams of the Idaho Conservation League on a drive-around of the area where Hercules has been conducting its exploratoratory drilling for copper and silver, on both the Cecil Andrus Wildlife Management Area (the “Andrus”) and National Forest Service land west of Cambridge, Idaho.

    As I’ve reported before, Camp Creek, which has been closed to motorized vehicle traffic since as long as the Andrus has been the Andrus, has been Hercules’ sole entry point for its drilling. We were able to get a key to the closest nearby gate (Grade Creek, just a bit west of Camp Creek) and drove up that road. About halfway up, a little spur led to a locked gate past which sat some huge poly tanks and other material and equipment, so we pulled off and took a brief look at that area. Both Jeff and Randy were impressively knowledgeable not only about what we saw there, but also about historic mining material (there was lots of evidence of a previous — they thought maybe the 1960s or 1970s — mining operation there).

    A person holding a dark, cylindrical rock in their hand, with wooden planks and grass in the background.
    An old drill core fragment, with floor joists from an old mining structure at this new storage site.
    A man stands next to a wooden framework on the ground, with small plants growing in the spaces. The area is surrounded by greenery and sunlight filtering through the trees.
    Jeff looking at the remnants of the structure, situated between two springs

    This storage area seemed neglected. Pallets of drilling “lubricants” and other material (including polyacrylamide) had obviously succumbed to at least a season of weather, with whole pallets of “grout” in bags that had broken open and begun dissolving. Other material, also on pallets, had had their cellophane wrapping blown off and — in several cases — containers of material had fallen over and spilled contents onto the ground.

    A pile of bags containing barite and loose material on wooden pallets, set against a backdrop of green hills under a clear blue sky.
    Pallets of eroded Barite grout. “Non-toxic” but also not a natural part of the environment there.
    A stack of green and yellow storage containers on a wooden pallet, with some containers tipped over, surrounded by grass and shrubs.
    One of many pallets of polyacrylamide
    A pile of overturned green plastic buckets with yellow lids, partially covered in vegetation.
    One of many buckets of polyacrylamide that had spilled its contents onto the ground. Polyacrylamide’s precursor is acrylamide, a known neurotoxin and carcinogen. Its biodegradability is still heavily debated.
    A 5-gallon container of AMC 206 drilling fluid additive, labeled as non-hazardous, placed on dirt with some green plants emerging nearby. The label includes handling instructions and emergency contact information.
    AMC 206, a drilling fluid viscosifier
    Stack of white plastic barrels labeled 'Vegetable Oil' partially covered with plastic wrap, surrounded by green foliage.
    Curious what a 5 gallon container of vegetable oil runs a mining company…
    Four large white cylindrical tanks on a gravel surface with a green hillside and sun in the background.
    These poly tanks looked to be intact
    Two large plastic storage tanks with a person examining one of them in a sunny outdoor setting.
    Jeff taking a closer look at one of the tanks.
    Two large white water storage tanks on a gravel surface with a hillside covered in greenery in the background. Two people are visible in the scene; one person is gesturing while the other is sorting through equipment nearby.
    Drilling pipe stacked beside the poly tanks; Jeff looking into the sun while Randy inspects a pallet of drilling materials and other apparent garbage.

    We continued on through the area, stopping here and there to look at the new roads that had been bulldozed into the open hillsides, leading to drilling sites, some of which had been “reclaimed,” and some of which looked better than we expected. Most of the roads, including several we’d hunted on for years, had been dug down several feet (e.g., the one from, Camp Creek up the hill to the south, then over one of my former favorite ridges to hunt chukar). The water source for the current drill site was Camp Creek, with a decent-sized gas-powered pump sending water through a series of hoses probably about a third of a mile up the hill. I don’t know how much water a 8,000-foot drill hole requires, but it’s a fair amount. I also don’t know what the holes that penetrate existing aquifers do to those aquifers. Since most house wells in the area are drilled down about 150 feet (a deep well is maybe twice that), I can imagine that each hole that Hercules drills intersects numerous aquifers. I imagine a hydrologist could tell you what kind of impact drilling exploration has on aquifers. I do know that cross-contamination in drilling is fairly common, especially when drilling operations don’t do a good job sealing the bore holes after they’re finished. Whether anyone checks these is anyone’s guess. Chris Paul has said that one of the reasons they decided to explore Idaho for minerals was that it had some of the most lenient mining laws and regulations in the U.S.

    A grassy hillside with patches of dirt, scattered rocks, and a clear blue sky in the background.
    A reclaimed drill site; I’m not sure how long since it’s been active.
    A dirt trail winding through a grassy landscape with hills in the background and patches of trees.
    This is the road heading down toward Camp Creek. Before the drilling, the road was a flush 2-track.
    A dirt road winding through a mountainous forest with green vegetation and scattered trees, captured from the side of a parked vehicle.
    The same road heading up the hill.
    A dirt road leading to a drilling site surrounded by hills and green grass.
    One of the most recent drill pads, on an entirely new series of roads. Hercules has dubbed this area the “Southern Flats.” It used to be one of my favorite spots for chukar.
    A grassy hillside with a dirt road leading up, showing excavation work and orange construction fencing in the foreground, under a clear blue sky.
    Just up the hill from the active drill site. Jeff and Randy explained that the ditch below the orange fencing was a catch-basin, and the fencing was to keep animals out of it.

    Overall, while I was grateful to Jeff and Randy for inviting me to tag along, and to have learned a lot from each of them, it was hard to see such profound disturbance to an area that I’d spent so many amazing hours on with my dogs and my wife, in all seasons, its beauty and solitude and wildlife, and all of the undefinable yet crucial things that come with that, uninterrupted by heavy machinery.

    In the Air

    In mid-May, I was lucky enough to get invited by ICL to tag along on an EcoFlight over the Hercules site. I’d never heard of EcoFlight, but was impressed by everything this non-profit does. I joined Randy, Jeff, Dennis Daw (director of the USRT fish and wildlife program), and the EcoFlight pilot Chris Benson for a flight from Ontario, Oregon to the area Hercules is exploring. It was weird and a little disorienting to get my first hawk’s view of terrain I’d come to know so well from the ground. The flight didn’t yield anything surprising (our ground tour had seen to that), but accentuated the natural beauty of the area; the day was perfect for flying and the spring greenup and remnants of snow on surrounding peaks made for stunning views in every direction. Picturing an open-pit mine, like the one in Butte, Montana or the huge Bingham Canyon mine in Utah on this landscape makes me feel ill.

    Four men standing in front of a small airplane on an airport tarmac, with clear blue skies in the background.
    From left: Randy Fox, Dennis Daw, Bob McMichael, Jeff Abrams (photo courtesy of EcoFlight).
    Aerial view of rolling green hills surrounding a deep blue lake, with winding roads and small patches of land along the water's edge.
    Snake River, Brownlee Reservoir, Brownlee Dam, Brownlee Creek Inlet, Woodhead Park (photo courtesy of EcoFlight). Hercules’ activity is to the right of the photo (not visible here).
    Aerial view of rolling green hills with winding dirt paths and a small structure in the valley.
    Hercules drilling pad (active, on left) on Southern Flats area just south of Camp Creek (photo by Bob McMichael)
    Aerial view of green rolling hills and slopes with visible pathways, taken from an airplane window.
    Highway 71 (extreme right edge, and in lower left), with Camp Creek road heading east. The Southern Flats area with the active drilling site is in the top center of the photo (courtesy of Bob McMichael).
    View from the cockpit of a small airplane, showing pilots in the cockpit with flight controls and instruments, and a passenger's legs in the foreground.
    Pilot Chris Benson (left seat), Randy Fox (right seat) inside the EcoFlight Cessna 210.

    In the Hall

    Hercules hosted a town hall meeting on May 13 in Cambridge’s Exhibit Hall. As expected, career politician Judy Boyle (of Ammon Bundy-supporting infamy, including her personal appearance in support of the Bundys’ 2016 violent and illegal take-over and occupation of the Malheur Wildlife Refuge in Oregon) introduced Hercules CEO Chris Paul by emphasizing the “national security” aspect of mining’s search for copper and silver. Boyle’s been promoting the mining exploration project west of Cambridge from the outset, but this time didn’t hawk it as a local job-providing affair. Instead, she limited her introductory comments, which confused me a bit: either she assumes she doesn’t have to try to sell the locals on the project or she knows that it won’t provide many jobs if it turns into an actual mining operation, or she knows she’s helping push the destruction of the Cecil Andrus Wildlife Management Area, mainly out of spite for the great Democratic leader of Idaho and former Secretary of the Interior.

    Paul presented a brief slideshow about the project, then introduced his new tech director who explained what they’re doing up there, including showing a video by an Australian company. Several people I talked to afterward wondered why Hercules hadn’t made its own video, which probably could have been done more easily…

    During his presentation, Paul referred to Hercules Metals as a local company, even though it’s Canadian, and referred to the “Property” Hercules has mining leases on in the Andrus WMA as land they owned; in fact, Hercules owns less than 100 acres of the “Property,” which encompasses about 24,000 acres. The company’s headquarters is on a 7.7-acre property in Cambridge that was recently purchased by Hercules’ owner, Anglo-Bomarc, a Vancouver-based Canadian mining company with a tax address registered in Toronto. Paul also highlighted the “extensive” financial contributions Hercules has made to about 20 local organizations, which seemed very similar to Perpetua’s PR campaign to sell to the locals farther north its controversial Stibnite Mining project. I haven’t asked any of the organizations how much Hercules gave them, but even if it’s $1,000 each (which is doubtful), that’s only $20K. Pretty cheap marketing for the “dupes” Paul called Idahoans in a podcast I shared in a previous post.

    I asked the first question during the Q&A:

    “Since Hercules is a Canadian company why do you keep referring to it as local or American?” He obviously didn’t appreciate being called out like that, and shifted to an immediately defensive stance.

    “What’s your question?” he asked.

    “Well, you’ve said you established a local workforce, but what’s in it for the Canadian company?”

    “Obviously, corporations pay taxes…” He took another question.

    Hercules’ marketing material, including the images on its website, foreground the natural beauty of the area, which — as I’ve written before and which all locals know — is a critical wintering ground for large herds of elk and mule deer, not to mention other game such as upland birds. I have subscribed to the company’s e-newsletters from the beginning and have attended two of its town hall meetings, and never has Chris Paul or any of Hercules’ marketing material ever mentioned the impact of mining on the area, the vast majority of which is publicly owned. At the most recent town hall, the final question was asked by a young woman. “What will be the impact of a potential mining operation on the land there?”

    As I’ve heard him say before, to similar types of questions, Paul essentially said that his company is merely looking for potential deposits of copper and silver, and that it “could take years” before they know if any mining company will want to develop a mine there.

    Anyone would expect him to say that. What’s disingenuous, though, about his rhetoric, especially when the company’s marketing material highlights the area’s natural beauty, is the fact that — as a mining professional — he knows probably better than anyone that the area will be destroyed.

    It’s common knowledge now that we need silver and copper for more things every day. Not even considering the tremendous and accelerating lust for these metals that data centers desire, or the vast amounts needed by the military industrial complex, or the political aspects of either, “alternative” energy and other more “mundane” uses of copper and silver and other minerals that can only be taken out of the ground (recycling supplies only a fraction of our need) is, sadly, a necessary evil of our time. Rationality, though, seems even scarcer than these precious metals when it comes to the location and regulation of some of these mines. In Hercules’ case — like many others’ — environmental safeguards don’t seem as robust as they might when it comes to protecting the landscape and waterways from damage. Hercules sits directly above the Snake River, above a complex of three reservoirs on the second biggest waterway in the west. The Snake feeds the Columbia, and is already struggling with increased pollution from upstream agriculture runoff, resulting in increased algae blooms and toxicity problems that lead to more and more closures of the waterways each year. Mining operations, including exploration such as that Hercules is doing, adds pollution to an already fragile ecosystem.

    In addition, most of Hercules’ activity has occurred on the Andrus, which — as previously mentioned many times — is an important wintering ground for deer, elk, and other big game. The land for the Andrus was donated by the Mellon Foundation specifically to protect these animals’ homes during the crucial winter season. Idaho’s unusually lenient mining laws, however, essentially disregard both the intent of the Andrus land donation and the fact of its essential nature to the animal residents. During my time with ICL recently, Jeff Abrams showed us a map he had borrowed from Idaho Fish & Game that showed radio collar data from mule deer and elk throughout the year; Hercules’ exploratory drilling and the development of an open pit mine would literally remove the entire neighborhood of those animals there.

    The whole thing just seems like a bad idea. Even if it was the richest deposit of copper and silver in the US (it’s not), it’s too close to the Snake River, it’s on a much too tight 2-lane road that is a major recreation corridor (numerous campgrounds are used year-round on the three reservoirs along the Snake within about 30 miles), it would destroy crucial wintering range for highly prized mule deer and elk, it would eliminate crucial grazing allotments on public land (both on the Andrus and USFS land), it would definitely increase pollution in the Snake River drainage, the companies involved are not US companies and — if the history of these companies and their operation is any indication — the bulk of the workforce would not be locals, and local communities would not see any significant economic benefit. Idaho’s mining laws are a combination of outdated federal and state laws dating back as far as 1872. It’s hard to imagine any sense breaking through any of the numerous leases and claims being granted: the scale of mining today outpaces by an order of magnitude anything imagined 150 years ago.

    As one attendee noted near the end of the town hall meeting, if the area were to be developed as an open pit mine, everyone in the room would probably be dead before they saw evidence of it. Chris Paul laughed.

  • Hercules 3

    Hercules 3

    This will probably be the final post for a while about Hercules.

    The town hall meeting called by Hercules Silver Corp last night in Cambridge was, unexpectedly, packed (I took the photo above before everyone had arrived). Hundreds of people showed up for what was, expectedly, a PR presentation by Chris Paul, CEO, and Chris Longton, VP of Exploration. I recognized many ranchers, teachers, and other community members in the crowd, as well as journalists, representatives from Idaho Wildlife Federation, Idaho Fish & Game, and Backcountry Hunters and Anglers. Judy Boyle, the 7-term District 9 Idaho House Representative from Midvale, began the meeting by introducing Paul and Longton, as well as the Washington County Commissioner for District 3, Gordon Wilkerson. Boyle, as seems to be her trademark in public comments, wasted no time criticizing the federal government, saying that the mining project was the first positive hope for the community since when “we used to manage our own forests, remember that!?” Then she handed the mic to Paul.

    Paul began by calmly saying that he was glad to see so many people come out to learn about the project, and that he decided to call the town hall meeting to respond to lots of rumors he’s heard about what’s going on, one of which is that next year there’ll be 200 miners coming to town. “That’s not going to happen,” he said.

    After Paul gave a long-ish review of the history of mining on this site, and some explanation of their scientific and exploration activities, Longton illustrated the mining process as a whole. He emphasized, repeatedly, that the project is in the exploration stage, the first stage of any mining project, and that it could take up to 13 years before it progressed to the design stage, which could take another 13 years before reaching the construction stage (Stage 3). He elaborated that the design stage (Stage 2) required detailed planning for the reclamation stage (Stage 6), which would remove much of the physical evidence of the mine’s existence. Paul added that present-day mining operations are required to bond for the reclamation stage, which prevents a lack of recourse for communities savaged by mining operations that abandon the mine, which is common historically. It was interesting to see Longton’s demeanor change during his part of the presentation from relatively calm to stressed and labored; I had the distinct sense that he was angry to have to explain all this. Then, during the Q&A afterward, he overdid the friendliness when answering questions. He came across to me as more volatile than I’d expect a geologist to be, which was in direct contrast to Paul, who — dressed to match the local code, in flannel plaid shirt, jeans, and a vest — stayed calm and understated the whole time. Sophisticated.

    All of this talk about mining, of course, has nothing to do with what Hercules is doing, which is trying to find copper and silver so they can sell their rights to an actual mining company. Much of what they shared in their presentation was obviously to allay fears of the negative impacts a future mine would have on the Andrus WMA. During the Q&A that followed their presentation, many questions focused on the impact of a mining operation in the area. Since Hercules isn’t going to be doing any mining, they, understandably, prefaced their answers as purely hypothetical and speculative, but tended to downplay the potential impact. Where would the workers live? (A. They’d hope to hire as many as possible locally, but typically mining operations want miners to live on-site or close by.) What would happen to an already “messed up” Highway 71? (A. No idea at all; that bridge’ll be crossed if and when it’s gotten to.) What would happen to the Snake River? (A. No idea since we don’t know what kind of mine it would be.) Would it be an open pit or an underground mine? (A. We don’t know yet, but that based on how deep the copper is, it would probably be subsurface and therefore have minimal surface disturbance; Paul, who answered this one, of course didn’t say anything about the plethora of environmental and occupational hazards of underground mines.) How would public access to the site be affected? (A. For what Hercules is doing there won’t be any impact or limit on access for recreation, grazing, etc.) I know you can’t say, but what’s your best guess how long the exploration phase you’re doing will take? (A. You’re right, I can’t say, but if you’re gonna press me I’d guess 5 years.) Someone else asked how many drill rigs they’ve had up there, and Paul said they had three this year, and might add a fourth next year.

    In my opinion, based on my extensive hiking up there this fall, Both Paul and Longton significantly minimized the impact on the site that their exploration has already had; Longton, for example, showed a slide of a huge drill rig whose footprint was bigger than Cambridge, and then contrasted it with a photo of their drill rigs, saying they could “probably fit 10 of them in this room.” Maybe not. The drill pads they’ve already made up there are sizeable for the area — at least 50 yards by 50 yards — but they didn’t say anything about the numerous roads they’ve bulldozed between drill rigs and storage areas. The two gated access roads into the site — Camp Creek and Grade Creek — have been noticeably eroded by the machinery traffic in the area, and the runoff and silt will no doubt end up in Brownlee Creek, Brownlee Reservoir, and the Snake River. No discussion of mitigation of this whatsoever.

    And, of course, not a word about the principle on which public land is founded: multi-use. Mining rights trump all other rights in Idaho. But part of the site is on Forest Service land, so they were blurry on permitting, as well as the breakdown of state-federal land and the respective regulations. I’d prepared a list of questions, as did Leslie, but it was clear from the outset that Hercules Silver Corp’s objective was to sell their part of the project to the community mainly by emphasizing that they’re not doing much to change anything up there right now; they’re “just looking.” They knew a major hope in the community was jobs the mine might bring (which Boyle alluded to in her introduction), but they immediately downplayed that as an imminent possibility, and as something they wouldn’t be involved in anyway since that would happen only after a mine had been designed and when it was entering Stage 3 (Construction), which could be 20 years off if I understood Longton’s presentation. It struck me as ironic that Judy Boyle introduced the meeting by suggesting how promising this would be economically for “the community” (as if everybody wants the same thing she, and the mining industry, wants: to pull as much money from the ground as possible, regardless of the impact on the land). Of course, she’s just doing her part to smooth the way, which is why Chris Paul has expressed great admiration for Boyle. If I were him, I’d want to be on her good side (full disclosure: I’ve long been bothered by Boyle’s efforts to eliminate federal land in Idaho, the passage of her trespass law in Idaho, and especially her in-person support of Ammon Bundy’s violent takeover of the Malheur Wildlife Refuge in 2016. I’ve witnessed many times her uncivil responses to positions that don’t agree with hers; see, for example, the factually vague, gaslighting rhetoric she uses in a Boise Metro Chamber video dialog titled (ironically) “In Search of Civility” from 2021, especially in contrast with the other guest, Idaho legislator Ilana Rubel).

    I talked with some folks afterward, and most had the same feeling I had: that it’s going to be a while before we know much, or before much changes. Hercules has the rights, and will explore — drilling and other research, including the geophysical stuff that all those high-voltage wires were for, about which at one point either Paul or Longton said, “You didn’t see piles of corpses anywhere near those wires” (I wondered if this was in response to my complaining about it in my previous posts) — for at least another year. One person I talked with, who runs a natural resource business in the area, said that if a mine goes in and they hire locally it will be tough if not impossible for him to hire any employees, as it will for other businesses in the area that can’t pay as much as the mine would. Several people I talked with afterward had the same concern about the non-economic impact on the public land: its importance for big game, upland game, and outdoor recreation. But one thing’s clear: if Hercules finds what mining companies feel is worth digging for, it’s going to happen, and they’ll do whatever necessary to make it happen. Whether the community will benefit in any way is anyone’s guess, but — unless Hercules pulls the plug because there’s not enough there to sell — it’s not an if but a when. Maybe I’ll be gone by then.

    It’s obvious I’m against this project 100%. I know that’s hypocritical in an absolute sense because we all depend on the metals they hope to find here, and they’re apparently in short supply (I’m not sure this is true, but they said so). My defense against my hypocrisy is that not all mining areas are in places that were originally private lands which were purchased and donated to a public entity specifically for wildlife conservation. Elk hunting, for example, is big business in Idaho but also an important part of life and local tradition in the area. The vast majority of elk killed every year nearby spend winters on the Hercules site. Some local hunters (many of whom are ranchers) have expressed concern about the negative impact wolves have had on elk numbers and harvest rates (the science on this is ambivalent at best); but if the Hercules site becomes a mine (even a subsurface one), that winter ground will be unavailable to elk and they will disappear from the area (as will all other access, recreational and cattle-related). No science needed to know that fact.

    Another layer of irony here is that Hercules and its major investor (Barrick Gold) are Canadian companies; Paul said he was from BC and it’s over-explored, and (in the podcast I linked to in Hercules 2) the Canadian government was a pain to deal with, especially compared to Idaho. Idaho prides itself on its natural beauty, but when it comes down to it its legislators will sell it if they can.