Partner Spotlight: Hermit’s Peak Watershed Alliance
Healing Northern New Mexico’s Watersheds, One Stream at a Time
by Brian Riepe
In the Sangre de Cristo Mountains north of Las Vegas, New Mexico, the scars of the 2022 Hermit’s Peak–Calf Canyon Fire still mark the land. For the team at Hermit’s Peak Watershed Alliance, those scars also tell a story of resilience. Since 2009, the Alliance has worked to restore and protect the region’s rivers and streams, helping both people and nature recover from fire, drought and erosion.
This summer, in partnership with Forever Our Rivers, the Alliance expanded its work into the Upper Mora and Tecolote watersheds—areas hit hardest by post-fire flooding. With support from the Las Vegas New Mexico Community Foundation, crews are building demonstration sites that show how simple, locally led restoration can help heal fire-scarred landscapes.
Using rocks, logs, willow branches and native seed, a small field crew constructs natural structures that slow water, capture sediment and rebuild soil. These small interventions help water linger longer on the land, encouraging plants to return and stabilizing eroding streambanks.
Much of the work takes place on private ranchlands, where landowners are essential to conservation. In New Mexico, most water flows through working lands managed by families who hold deep ties—and often water rights—to their creeks and pastures. The Regensberg family, whose property was severely affected by the fire, wanted to turn that devastation into an opportunity to rebuild. Together with the Alliance, they’re restoring the stream that winds through their ranch, creating shallow meadows, pools and wetlands that provide habitat for birds and wildlife while reconnecting the river to its floodplain.
“The goal isn’t just to fix what was damaged,” said a member of the Alliance team, “but to bring back complexity—to let the river do what it does best when given the chance.”
The Alliance also works closely with the New Mexico Acequia Association and its youth crews, blending watershed science with generations of traditional water knowledge. This partnership connects young people to their heritage while giving them practical experience in caring for the land.
By year’s end, the combined efforts are expected to restore nearly two miles of stream, construct about 60 instream structures and improve close to 20 acres of burned terrain. Just as importantly, these projects are building a community of stewards who see that meaningful change doesn’t require heavy machinery—just commitment, collaboration and trust in nature’s design.
Hermit’s Peak Watershed Alliance’s work mirrors the values of Forever Our Rivers: community empowerment, partnership and practical, nature-based restoration that benefits both people and wildlife. Together, they’re proving that even after fire and loss, recovery can start with something as simple as a few rocks, logs and willing hands.
Images: Courtesy Hermit’s Peak Watershed Alliance
Learn more or donate at foreverourrivers.org/donate













