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You are currently browsing the Backcountry Musings weblog archives for September, 2009.
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Archive for September 2009
Huckleberries
7. September 2009 by Linda Hays.
Went back up to Telephone Hill yesterday with my daughter, Shannon and son-in-law, Ted and his father Big Ted along with the Quads and 1 Kubota and went Huckleberry picking, the plants were full and the berries where much larger and still coming on, in no time we had picked a few containers and headed on up the hill to see the top. One rough spot with a big rock in the trail we girls could not navigate, however Ted, SIL, got all of us over except the Kubota. The top was beautiful and then we headed back leaving many more Huckleberries behind, So sad.
At the Yellow Jacket trailhead we meet some Boise riders with Tennessee Walkers Riding Club, they had come in from the other direction. All were tired and chatted a while, said they had ridden with BBCH or TVBCH group before, they enjoyed the trail.
We had a great time and it was very awesome to be able to share where I go on weekends with my family, who don’t ride horses. Without SBBCH to show me these sites I would not be able to share them. Riding a quad on that trail for me was a bit of a challenge, found new places to be sore, A couple times I yellowed for my trusty steed Lily, not to mention when steering a Quad you have to pay attention.
Linda Hays, Dream Weaver Mules
Posted in Around the Campfire | Print | No Comments »
Grandjean, Idaho
6. September 2009 by Rob Adams.
Description: 5400-foot elevation. 31 campsites near the border of the Sawtooth Wilderness. The Idaho Centennial Trail heads south along the
Amenities: It’s a typical Forest Service campground, with an outhouse, drinking water, fire pits and picnic tables.
Season: late May – September
Reservations: NO
Fee: day use $5; camping $10 (Large no-fee area along the river perfect for horse camping)
Sawtooth National Recreation Area
HC 64,
208-774-3000
Location: From Stanley, go 35 miles northwest and south on ID 21, then 7 miles east on Forest Road 524. Turn left on Forest Road 824 at the Sawtooth Lodge.
To travel to Grandjean is to journey into
Grandjean is in the northwest corner of the Sawtooth National Recreation Area where ponderosa pines tower and the
Though less popular than
Sawtooth National Recreation Area Special Uses Administrator Dave Fluetsch said the area is increasingly used as a wilderness access.
“One of the things that’s growing in popularity is that it’s an access to the wilderness area. I was there (recently), and the trailhead parking was completely full,” Fluetsch said. “You’ll see a lot of through hikers. Some people will meet in the middle (of the wilderness area) and trade car keys.”
Grandjean has a storied history that has been the subject of newspaper and magazine articles for 100 years. It is where one of the West’s most educated early forest rangers hung his hat for a spell. And that is where this story really begins. Before a colorful woman by the name of Babe Hansen opened a hunting lodge in Grandjean, the U.S. Forest Service occupied the area as a short-lived ranger station. Emile Grandjean, for whom the valley, a nearby mountain and a nearby creek are named, was one of the earliest supervisors of the
Grandjean, 74 at the time of his death in
As a third-generation student of forestry in his native country, Grandjean was years ahead of the first Americans to receive formal academic training in the subject. When the
In 1908, the 5.5 million-acre national forest was divided into the Sawtooth,
Then and now, the Boise National Forest included the upper South Fork of the Payette River valley, where the hamlet of Grandjean is still nestled among tree-enshrouded ridges and the inspiring backdrop of the Sawtooths.
Although the Grandjean area has remained in public ownership, the way it is governed changed in 1972, when Congress established the 756,000-acre Sawtooth National Recreation Area, which includes three national forests, five
According to Congress, the SNRA is to be managed so that “the conservation and development of scenic, natural, historic, pastoral, wildlife, and other values” are preserved. The enabling legislation continues to state that the use and disposal of natural resources like timber, grazing and mining “will not substantially impair the purposes for which the recreation area is established.”
And that, it appears, is what the managers of the Sawtooth National Recreation Area have done in the Grandjean area. It’s a place where history and recreation meld together like the ancient granite of the Sawtooth Batholith, which created the towering crags of the
Pictures of trips out of Grandjean: http://picasaweb.google.com/sbbchidaho2006/SawtoothPackTrips#
Posted in Around the Campfire, Horse Camping | Print | 1 Comment »
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