19. December 2016 · Comments Off on 2016 Recreational Trails Annual Report · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

Since 1991, the Recreational Trails Program (RTP) has provided more than $1 billion in Federal funding for trails across the country. RTP grants have been an essential ingredient in creating and improving over 21,350 trail-related projects nationwide, including urban greenways, nature centers, and horse, hiking, mountain bike, and motorized trails, as well as snow and water routes.

RTP leverages hundreds of millions of dollars of additional support from other sources for trails, encourages productive cooperation among trail users, and facilitates healthy outdoor recreation and economic activity in countless communities. See the RTP database for details of these projects.

American Trails joins with other members of the Coalition for Recreational Trails in celebrating RTP. This federation of national and regional trail-related member organizations work together to build awareness and understanding of the Recreational Trails Program.

2016 – Report – Overview – Recreational Trails – Environment – FHWA

Publication No. FHWA-HEP-17-001

Download the PDF Version of 2016 RTP Annual Report (PDF 24 MB)

PDF files can be viewed with the Acrobat® Reader®

14. December 2016 · Comments Off on Fall 2016 – The Wildest Place · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

SBFC Newsletter-Fall 2016

The Selway-Bitterroot Frank Church Foundation Fall newsletter is attached.
Enjoy!
Sue Webster
Selway Bitterroot Frank Church Foundation
Communication & Membership Coordinator
RMRS – 322 E. Front St. Ste. 401
Boise, ID 83702
208-861-2010
swebster@selwaybitterroot.org

Connecting individuals and communities to Wilderness

11. December 2016 · Comments Off on 2016 – End of Season Party · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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It was a dark and foggy night on December 10, 2016 when brave members and guest ventured out onto the road for the drive to Rebecca Ignacio’s party barn located in farm country north west of Emmett. Rebecca has taken a barn and turned it into a very attractive venue for groups activities. Read all about it and see Picture !  End of Season Party

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08. December 2016 · Comments Off on Risch introduces community-backed wilderness bill for Scotchman Peaks in North Idaho · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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BY ROCKY BARKER
rbarker@idahostatesman.com

U.S. Sen. Jim Risch introduced a bill Thursday to protect 13,900 acres in north Idaho as wilderness.

The Scotchman Peaks Wilderness Act of 2016 would protect a rugged range of mountains on the Montana border, near the city of Sandpoint and Lake Pend Oreille. Its low-elevation boreal and old-growth forests support a unique diversity of plants and Canada lynx, wolverine, mountain goats, moose and grizzly bears.

“If passed, this legislation would allow future generations of Idahoans to enjoy Scotchman Peaks, while at the same time protecting the needs and rights of local communities and tribes,” said Risch, an Idaho Republican. “This bill was introduced today to start the public process, and will not move forward until I hear from Idahoans directly about this topic. I look forward to holding a public hearing in the next Congress to receive input.”

The bill, introduced at the request of the Bonner County Board of Commissioners, has wide support including one of Idaho’s largest forest products companies and the Greater Sandpoint Chamber of Commerce.

Support for Scotchman Peaks wilderness dates to the late 1970s. But in 2005, the Friends of Scotchman Peaks formed specifically to organize community support for wilderness designation for the area.

“Sen. Risch’s support of the homegrown Scotchman Peaks wilderness campaign reflects the far-reaching community support for permanent protection of one of Idaho’s often overlooked wild gems,” said Craig Gehrke, Idaho state director for The Wilderness Society.

Rocky Barker: 208-377-6484, @RockyBarker

08. December 2016 · Comments Off on The 50-Year Story Of Creating Idaho’s New Wilderness Area · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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The 50-Year Story Of Creating Idaho’s New Wilderness Area
IdahoPTV/EarthFix | Dec. 7, 2016 3 p.m. | Updated: Dec. 7, 2016 4:24 p.m.

Castle Peak is so hidden from view that you can’t see it from any highway.

But it just might be the most important mountain in Idaho. Castle Peak and the surrounding Boulder-White Cloud Mountains have stirred up fights over mining, recreation and conservation — fights that have changed the course of political careers, including that of a self-described “Democratic lumberjack from North Idaho” named Cecil Andrus who became governor after taking a stand over the future of this rugged, mineral-rich wilderness.

And now, a generation later and the efforts of Idaho’s Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson and others, it is part of the Northwest’s newest wilderness area.

The team at Outdoor Idaho has the story of the 50-years-in-the-making wilderness designation for a wonderland of peaks, lakes, headwaters and steep, remote forests.

Idaho Public Television calls it “some of the most dazzlingly diverse country in the West, deserving of the gold standard of protection.”

In its hour-long Special, the Outdoor Idaho crew visits the three new wilderness areas in the center of Idaho – the White Clouds, the Hemingway-Boulders, and the Jim McClure-Jerry Peak Wilderness – to tell the fascinating story of how the threat of an open-pit mine eventually led to a unanimous vote for Wilderness in Congress. This program also examines some of the major battles yet to be decided.

The entire hour-long “Beyond the White Clouds” program will be available to view here until Dec. 19.

04. December 2016 · Comments Off on Ride for Joy 2016 Report · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Click on picture to see full report

This flyer is from our very own Marybeth Conger regarding Ride for Joy. If anyone is interested in donating to the organization the address is Ride for Joy, PO Box 140295, Boise, ID 83714 marybethconger@rideforjoy.org

03. December 2016 · Comments Off on Wilderness Volunteers Schedule 2017 · Categories: Around The Campfire, Work Parties and Projects

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Project Schedule by Date

Click on a project name for more information. The fee for 2017 projects is $299. If you want to be on the waitlist for a project that is currently full, submit an application. We will notify you if space becomes available. If you are still interested in doing the project, payment will be due at that time.  Remember, December registration for Summer/Fall 2017 projects (projects from July to November) is limited to Supporters of Wilderness Volunteers. You can become a Supporter by making a donation to Wilderness Volunteers.

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02. November 2016 · Comments Off on Mountain Bikes and the Wilderness · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

Mountain bikers don’t need to ride in wilderness areas

BY JOHN WHEATON

Like many mountain bikers, I used to share the opinion that bikes should be allowed on any trails on public land, including wilderness areas. Why shouldn’t I be allowed to ride my bike anywhere that I want? I was a Southwest Idaho Mountain Biking Association board member for three years, and ride regularly around the West. My sense of entitlement to public land use came naturally.

However, that sentiment is rooted in an ignorance of why the Wilderness Act was passed, coupled with a lack of knowledge about how much access mountain bikers already have. Legislation sponsored by Utah Sens. Mike Lee and Orrin Hatch (S. 3205) panders to this lack of awareness — and the entitlement that it breeds.

Gutting one of our nation’s bedrock conservation laws, the bill will open designated wilderness areas to mountain biking, a move that should be soundly opposed. Public lands are treasured by everyone, not just mountain bikers, and are designated for many reasons, not just recreation.

Read more here:

Idaho’s new wilderness helps drive mountain bike bill

BY MICHELLE L. PRICE
The Associated Press
AND ROCKY BARKER
rbarker@idahostatesman.com

SALT LAKE CITY
More than 100 million acres of America’s most rugged landscapes designated as wilderness are off-limits to mountain bikers, but two Utah senators have introduced legislation that would allow bikers to join hikers and horseback riders in those scenic, undisturbed areas.

The proposal is controversial within the biking community and opposed by conservationists who say bikes would erode trails and upset the five-decade notion of wilderness as primitive spaces.

Read more here:

Should America’s wilderness be open to mountain bikes?

BY ROB HOTAKAINEN
rhotakainen@mcclatchydc.com

WASHINGTON
For most environmentalists, nothing is more sacred than America’s wilderness: 109 million acres of land in 44 states protected by Congress and “untrammeled by man,” where only hikers and horseback riders are allowed.

But many of the nation’s mountain bikers want in, too.

“Let’s talk about the science here for a second: A mountain bike tire is essentially as much damage as a bunch of hikers going up a trail with all their hiking poles, and it’s less damage than equestrian use,” said Eric Brown, trail director for the Whatcom Mountain Bike Coalition in Bellingham, Wash.

Read more here:

 

30. October 2016 · Comments Off on Succor Creek – Power Line Loop Ride · Categories: Around The Campfire, Fun Rides

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Long time members of Squaw Butte know Moosely as the little horse that does!  What every is asked of him, be it carrying barbed wire, chain saws, the kitchen for a pack trip or a load of tin cans full of rocks he happily does it.  On October 29, 2016 he had an assignment that he truly enjoyed,  He was asked to take Rachel Pearce on her first horse back ride.  This ride was on one of our favorite fall rides in the BLM managed Succor Creek area of south western Idaho and South eastern Oregon. Rachel is the daughter of Mitch Pearce who is a good friend of  members Rob Adams & Rob Dhuyvetter.  Rachel has been taking an Equine Studies class at her school, and though it would be fun to ride a horse instead of just reading about them in books.  Moosely totally enjoyed the day, he and Rachel got along fine as long as they both agreed that the best place to be was within 50 foot of his buddy Kestrel who was being ridden by her dad.

Rachel picked a great day for her first ride, we caught a break between weather fronts and had almost perfect fall weather, cool without being cold and just a light breeze.  The rain of the previous days kept the dust down, and the rain with the help of some very busy beavers had the creek that flows through the canyon full of waters with some nice ponds to ride by and through.  Nancy smith  lead the ride and members formed into small groups spread over maybe 1/4 mile.  When all were back at the trailer and the stock taken care of, we shared a variety of foods and deserts before heading to our respective homesteads.  It was a great ride to end the Squaw Butte riding season and I am sure everyone is already looking forward to 2017.  Pictures provided by Mitch Pearce and Rob Adams.

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27. October 2016 · Comments Off on Summary of Projects & Activities Squaw Butte 2016 · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Click here to read the 2016 Season Report 2016-summary-of-projects-activities

25. October 2016 · Comments Off on American Trails Report 2016 · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Click on the pictures to read

 

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trailmarkers
Trail Marking Systems   Rhino Signs        Voss Signs

18. October 2016 · Comments Off on Bryan Play Day – October 2016 · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Wow – that was fun, wasn’t it? Thank you ALL for making it another fantastic year. A special thanks to my kids – Athena, Blake Sappe and Olivia Sappé for helping put it all together and keeping it running smooth. Blake Sappe – you may have missed your calling. You might consider turning in your rope for face paint. The kids’ loved you and so do I Peaches.
See full pictures on Picasa
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16. October 2016 · Comments Off on 2016 Public Outreach & Yard Sale · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Tractor supply loaned us these pop-up tents to help shelter our table from the light rain that fell at time during the sale.  They did a great job and didn’t blow away with sand bags attached to each leg.

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Don’t be surprised if this hat finds it’s way into a gift box at the end of season party gift exchange!

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Some happy ladies, the sale was a success, we are all packed up, and it is time to head for home before the next front hits!

Read about this event

12. October 2016 · Comments Off on Bute & Banamine – Commonly Used & Misused in Horses · Categories: Around The Campfire

horsesidevet“Hey Doc… my horse has been colicky since last night. I gave her some Banamine® and she seemed OK for a while, but now she doesn’t look so good…”
This scenario is unfortunately still common in my vet practice.  Although my established clients know to call me before administering these medications, there are many horse owners who regularly use these two common but poorly understood prescription drugs without any veterinary guidance. Often, things work out fine, but in some cases, unguided use of these drugs causes catastrophic results.
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READ MORE

11. October 2016 · Comments Off on BCHA Patches and bumper stickers now available! · Categories: Around The Campfire

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BCHA Online Store

21. September 2016 · Comments Off on Boise Forest Coalition – Open Letter · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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To: Friends of the Boise National Forest
From: Boise Forest Coalition
Date: September 20, 2016
RE: Pioneer Fire Field Trip and Invitation to Boise Forest Coalition

Dear Friends,
We are writing on behalf of the Boise Forest Coalition (BFC). The purpose of this letter is to invite your attendance at an upcoming field trip to visit the Pioneer Fire and to encourage participation in the Boise Forest Coalition and our work. The Pioneer Fire burned across over 180,000 acres within the Boise National Forest this summer. The field trip is intended to provide a first-hand look at the impacts from the fire (both positive and negative) and to provide useful perspective as the Forest Service and BFC consider potential restoration and management actions identified through both the Burned Area Emergency Rehab (rapid response) and NEPA (project development) process. As a representative of an important constituency, we invite you to consider participating in the field trip, and learning more about opportunities to participate and support the efforts of the Boise National Forest and the BFC as we move forward to restore and protect our forests.

What: Field Trip to Pioneer Fire area

When: Tuesday, September 27, 2016, 9 a.m.

Where: Idaho City Ranger District (Highway 21, milepost 38.5, Idaho City)

Note: Bring a pack lunch, sturdy shoes, water and be prepared for a day in the field. Bus transportation will be provided from Idaho City.
RSVP Required: Brant Petersen, District Ranger, (Bpetersen02@fs.fed.us)

About the Coalition

The Boise Forest Coalition was formed in September 2010, bringing together diverse interests to craft recommendations for multi-faceted forest projects in the Boise National Forest. The citizen-led group is open to anyone with an interest in Boise National Forest management. We generally meet on the first Thursday of the month at a location that is relevant to our project work. Additional info, including protocols, meeting notes, etc. are available at boiseforestcoalition.org.

On Behalf of the Boise Forest Coalition,
Rachel Vandenburg, Steering Committee Member
Jonathan Oppenheimer, Steering Committee Member
Art Beal, Steering Committee Member

19. September 2016 · Comments Off on September 2016 issue of Northwest Horse Source · Categories: Around The Campfire

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Read this September Issue

16. September 2016 · Comments Off on Take Action! Support the Land & Water Conservation Fund · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Dear BCHA Members:

As the 114th Congress looks toward its final months of work, we urge you to support the bipartisan agreement to permanently reauthorize the Land and Water
Conservation Fund that passed the Senate in April as part of the Energy Policy Modernization Act of 2015.

BCHA is a member of the LWCF Coalition that supports this bipartisan compromise. We want our members to be part of a major push to demonstrate our support.

Please sign your BCH state or chapter onto the LWCF Coalition letter that soon will be sent to Congress. The letter can be accessed here.

LWCF is one of our country’s most important conservation programs, supporting local communities and increasing access to the outdoors in every state and 99% of all counties. The program is overwhelmingly popular and has maintained broad bipartisan support over its 50-year history of successful, locally-driven conservation. Yet, in 2015, it was allowed to temporarily expire and then given only a short term renewal.

Since permanent authorization of the LWCF passed the Senate, but not the House, it is going to be on a shorter list of issues that must be addressed before the end of this Congress. It is part of the Energy Bill Conference Committee that is convening right now.

Why is this Important to Horsemen?

BCHA prepared a fact sheet on the importance of Congress reauthorizing the LWCF. To view a map or a listing of LWCF funded projects in your state, go to the LWCF Coalition website. As you will see, LWCF has benefited our national parks, national forests, state and local parks and other natural areas for over half a century.

The Energy Bill Conference Committee has included two other provisions that are important to BCHA members. The first creates a new National Park Maintenance and Revitalization Fund that is over and above LWCF—NOT taking authorized dollars away from LWCF—from offshore energy revenues. The fund would dedicate $150 million per year toward addressing the maintenance backlog in national parks, including trails.

Secondly, the bill would dedicate at least $10 million each year of LWCF funds that “shall be used for projects that secure recreational public access to Federal public land for hunting, fishing, or other recreational purposes.’’ This could include national forests and other public lands. So again, the public and horsemen could be the beneficiaries of directing this small portion (no more than 1.5%) of LWCF monies toward enhanced public access.

Take Action

Again, please consider signing on to the Coalition letter by adding your BCH state/chapter to the list of LWCF supporters as soon as possible. It’s urgent. Congress is in session only for a few more weeks.

We would also appreciate you forwarding this invitation for sign-on to BCH chapters/units in your state. We need the fantastic geographic diversity among BCHA’s membership to sound off on the importance of LWCF in creating and expanding recreational opportunities in every state.

Thank you for taking action!

We are hopeful that Congress will act to permanently authorize this landmark legislation that recognizes the universal importance of LWCF, dedicates an annual funding stream to address the national park maintenance backlog, and dedicate a modest amount of LWCF funds to improve public access to public lands.

Donald Saner,
BCHA Chairman

06. September 2016 · Comments Off on American Hiking wants to send you volunteers to help with your trail needs in 2017! · Categories: Around The Campfire

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Dear National Trails Day® Event Hosts,

Thank you so much for participating in America’s largest celebration of trails on June 4, 2016! I wanted to send a special thank-you to you all for inspiring volunteers nationwide and hosting a trail stewardship activity at your NTD event. In total, 25,900 trail volunteers contributed $2.8 million in sweat equity on 466 projects, building and maintaining 1,200 miles of trail across America, all in one day!

I’m sure one day of service is not enough to take care of all of the trail maintenance needs you have, so I wanted to tell you more about our extended trail maintenance program, Volunteer Vacations. If you are not familiar with the program, Volunteer Vacations are week long trail building/maintaining projects organized by AHS & hosted by federal and state land managers, trail organizations and other nonprofit partner groups across the country. We understand that with reduced budgets and limited resources, trail building and maintaining needs often get backlogged or remain incomplete. Our Volunteer Vacations program is designed to send you a crew of eager volunteers, ready to assist with your trail needs. Any government land management agency or nonprofit organization can request a crew. (non-profit organizations will need to be Alliance Members of AHS to host)

American Hiking provides the following project assistance:
Promotion of your trip nationally through our website, printed trip schedule, industry events and through our sponsors and partners
Logistical support and communication throughout the planning and trip process
Volunteer food stipend for trips that cannot provide food
Assistance from a volunteer crew leader who will aid with menu planning, food shopping and lodging logistics

Volunteers Provide:
Volunteer labor and eager attitudes!
Camping gear (backpack, sleeping bag, tent, personal items) if indoor accommodations are not provided
Travel to and from a predetermined pick-up point, generally the closest major airport

Hosts Provide:
Project plan and backup plan
Technical expertise and supervision for the volunteers
Lodging/Accommodations for volunteers (cabin, lodge, house, improved or primitive campsite)
Tools & safety equipment/first-aid supplies
Group cooking supplies

Request a 2017 Volunteer Vacation Crew

Step 1: Read the Host Guide 2017 to determine if your organization can fulfill the responsibilities of hosting a Volunteer Vacations crew.

Step 2: Please consider the following, HERE, prior to submitting your request.

Step 3: APPLY ONLINE for a 2017 Volunteer Vacations crew

DUE DATE FOR ALL REQUESTS: OCTOBER 7, 2016

We will review your project request and let you know if we have any questions. All submissions will be contacted in October, 2016. If your project request has been accepted you will be asked to confirm final trip details and sign the 2017 Host Agreement. Please don’t hesitate to let me know if you have any questions. Thanks again for hosting an NTD event and potential interest in hosting a volunteer crew with American Hiking Society!

Best,
Libby

Libby Wile, Senior Director of Volunteer Stewardship
American Hiking Society
8605 Second Ave I Silver Spring, MD 20910
lwile@americanhiking.org
p 301.565.6704 x 704

02. September 2016 · Comments Off on Equine Disease Communication Center (EDCC) · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

EDCC

Visit Web Site

02. September 2016 · Comments Off on Idaho Horse Council Fall Meeting · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

Agenda and IHC Notes by MB August 20 2016IHC Meeting

02. August 2016 · Comments Off on Selway-Bitterroot Frank Church Foundation 2016 Summer Newsletter · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Read the summer newsletter

26. July 2016 · Comments Off on 2016 – Sawtooth Week · Categories: Around The Campfire, Fun Days, Horse Camping

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Blog Post by Linda Paul

As the trip winds down, euphoria and melancholy gather like the Muses’ faces on stage. Euphoria is nourished by new friendships, great stories, rides, scenery, and food, not to mention a week spent offline and blissfully ignorant of the latest grim headlines. Melancholy stems from the reality that all joyful adventures must come to an end, and soon granite peaks will give way to shrieking red and blue loyalists.

The trip began inauspiciously. Nearly half of the original participants were missing thanks to a shit storm of bad luck, including a car wreck. My adventures began, as a guest of Janine Townsend, with a short (how short, I had no idea) scouting trip from our campsite to Stanley Lake. First to arrive and set up camp, we were eager to explore. This was my maiden voyage aboard Bubba the Mule. We rode alongside a road that was far too busy, then worked our way down to the lake, scouting future swimming sites. Transcending a ridiculously steep embankment, we offered the animals a drink, but they were more interested in grass than in water. On the way back up that embankment, Bubba the Mule and I encountered a parting of the ways. Despite my grand efforts to hang onto at least one rein, I ended up holding a hank of leather attached to nothing but air. Injured pride aside, I tied the remaining rein into a very short roping rein, remounted Bubba and we headed back to camp just in time to greet the newest arrivals.

Read More               Pictures
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24. July 2016 · Comments Off on Trail Meister – An excellent horsemen resource · Categories: Around The Campfire

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Articles

Tips

Reviews

Videos

Knots

Trails

06. July 2016 · Comments Off on 2015 BCHA Stat’s 2015 · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

BCHA-2015

BCHA-Hours2015

05. July 2016 · Comments Off on Kennally Creek Project weekend · Categories: Around The Campfire, Horse Camping, Work Parties and Projects

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Kennally_Johna_Acorn_Smile KennallyCreekProject2016

03. July 2016 · Comments Off on Wilderness Volunteers Blog · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Exploring Bighorn Crags in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness

If it’s natural/biodegradable is it still litter?

Hanging Bear Bags, PCT Style

11. June 2016 · Comments Off on National Trails Day 2016 · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events, Work Parties and Projects

Peace Creek

 Middle Fork of the Payette River
Squaw Butte BCHI
June 4 & 5, 2016

June 4, 2016 is American Hiking Society’s National Trails Day®, the country’s largest celebration of trails. National Trails Day events will take place in every state across the country and will include hikes, biking and horseback rides, paddling trips, bird watching, geocaching, gear demonstrations, stewardship projects and more.

Squaw Butte each year plans a national trail day project, it the past they have been held in state parks picking up trash, the Payette national forest fixing trail bed and this year at the Peace Creek Trail head, removing a large quantity of fallen trees that were blocking two trails.

Read More: 2016 National trails day             More Pictures

19. May 2016 · Comments Off on 2015 Season Accomplishments for the McCall/New Meadows Trail Crew · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events, Work Parties and Projects

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PNFTrailCrew2015  See the whole report

18. May 2016 · Comments Off on FY 2015 Boise National Forest North Zone Trails Program Accomplishments · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events, Work Parties and Projects

2015 Trail Accomplishment end of season report NZT01Eagles Nest Trail Project
District: Cascade
Trail No. 11104
Background:
The Eagles Nest Trail was inspected on November 13, 2013. The trail was inspected from the boundary of Idaho State Land and Boise National Forest where the 400 road parallels the trail. The Eagles Nest trail is a moderate to high use trail located in a remote are on the Cascade Ranger District
Purpose and Need:
The project is located approximately 1 mile from a parking area along the 400 road. The trail crosses several small ridges and descends to the first stream and Stream Environment Zone (SEZ). The SEZ area is approximately 15 yards long. The trail then ascends up and over a small hill to the next SEZ. The length of the second SEZ is approximately 53 yards. The trail ascends out of the marshy area and heads northeast. The approaches to both areas are very steep and incised. The grades exceed 25% and there are large quantities of sediment entering the SEZs and the perennial stream that runs across the trail. The wet areas are highly impacted and have significant trail braiding from users trying to find a better route. The total length of the project is approximately 425 yards.
The reconstruction of this section will improve public safety, reduce significant ongoing resource damage, and improve the overall user experience.
Completed Repair: The project is currently under construction. The estimated time of completion is mid-October.
– Realignment and construction of approximately ¼ miles of new trail
– Decommissioning and restoration of ¼ miles of existing trail
– Construction of two Puncheon/Causeways approximately 70 yards long

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Project in the Yellow Pine Area

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17. May 2016 · Comments Off on Trail Project Season is Finally Here! · Categories: Around The Campfire, Horse Camping, Work Parties and Projects

TP06TP07TP02TP01TP04TP03TP08 Attending a BCHI Project Weekend

11. May 2016 · Comments Off on why killing wolves might be a bad idea · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Click on Movie

05. May 2016 · Comments Off on Idaho’s Track Record Predicts What Happens When Public Lands are Sold · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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Idaho Land Sales: A Prediction of the Future?
by Tony Hansen

For months now, the debate over whether states should be given ownership of Federally-owned lands has raged. Proponents of the move say the Federal government is incapable of properly managing the land and claim the ground should be returned to state control and that doing so would mean only improved management and not a public lockout.

Opponents say that doing so would almost certainly mean a net loss in access by the public.

So which side is telling a closer version of the truth?

Perhaps we can look to Idaho for historical insight.

The Wilderness Society recently filed a public records request for an analysis of the Idaho Department of Lands. What they found is interesting indeed.

Since 2000, the state of Idaho has sold more than 100,000 acres of publicly-owned land. The buyers? Timber companies, cattle ranchers, lakeside homeowners and privately-owned fishing clubs along the banks of prime trout waters.

That 100,000-plus acres is part of more than 1.7 million acres of public land the state has sold of the roughly 4.25 million acres Idaho received at statehood. That’s a sell-through rate of roughly 41 percent.
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History is clear on what will happen if our national public lands are given to the state, Brad Brooks, The Wilderness Society’s Boise-based deputy regional director told the Idaho Statemen. They’re almost certain to end up in hands that will lock the public out.

Read Report

 

NoT

 

02. May 2016 · Comments Off on Northwest Horse May 2016 · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

NWH-May

Cover Story: Getaway Horse Play – Your Horse Wants To Go!

Equine Wellness: Barefoot, Shod or Boots?

Getting Help in a Backcountry Emergency

Trainer’s Corner: Becoming a Student

The Adventures of Spanky and Dally

Back Country Horsemen of Washington – Joe Watt Canyon Ride

Spring time in Kittitas County finds the elk herds leaving their winter feeding grounds, early spring flowers in full bloom and the annual Back Country Horsemen of Washington Joe Watt Canyon Prize Ride. This year the ride will be May 14th, with camping available both before and after the ride – a Discover Pass is required for this area. This beautiful, popular ride travels the foot hills of the LT Murray elk feeding station, giving vast mountain views and rolling hills of wild flowers in bloom. Riders will enjoy lots of single track trail mixed with abandoned roads for 3 hours of riding. Mixed in along the ride route are manned stations offering games of skill to the participants so that they may hopefully build a winning poker hand good enough to win one of the many prizes being offered back at camp.

This year’s ride proceeds will go to help fund BCHW Tahoma Chapter to complete trail projects in the Norse Peak Wilderness. The ride flier with all the information is posted at www.bchw.org and on Facebook at BCHW Joe Watt Canyon Prize Ride

18. April 2016 · Comments Off on USFS Trail Funding Talking Points · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

Contact: Babete Anderson, National Press Officer, (202) 205-1782, branderson@fs.fed.us
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14. April 2016 · Comments Off on Design Guidebook for Trails, Trailheads, and Campgrounds · Categories: Around The Campfire, Horse Camping

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Hancock, Jan ; Vander Hoek, Kim K. Jones; Bradshaw, Sunni ; Coffman, James D.; Engelmann, Jeffrey . 2007.

Equestrian Design Guidebook for Trails, Trailheads, and Campgrounds. 0723 2816. Missoula, MT: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Missoula Technology and Development Center. 312 p.

This guidebook provides information for developing trails, trailheads, and campgrounds that are sensitive to the needs of riders and their animals. The emphasis is on highly developed facilities and programs such as those in urban, rural, and some wildland areas. The information presented can be adapted for a variety of settings and levels of development, as well as jurisdictional requirements.

 

 

Keywords: Accessibility, arenas, bridges, bridle paths, campgrounds, corrals, Equidae, equines, facilities, Federal Highway Administration, fences, fencing, FHWA, fords, gates, highlines, hitch rails, horse camps, horse riders, horses, latches, master plans, mules, multiple use, pack stock, parking areas, parks, picket lines, planning, recreation, recreational facilities, round pens, shared use, staging areas, surface treatments, tethering rails

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13. April 2016 · Comments Off on Squaw Butte Public Fun Rides · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

PR2016During the months of February, March and April the Squawbutte Chapter of BCHI hosts three public fun rides as a way to introduce potential member to the organization and get current and former members back on their horses after the winter layoff. With the Owyhee area being generally snow free in February and March, we hold our first rides in that area.

Celebration Park, Birds of Prey
February 21, 2016 – 26 Members and Guests signed up for this event, not all showed up. Lou Ann also posted this event on a local horse site and that attracted more guest! Weather was blue sky’s with a crisp breeze from the east. Due to the number of riders, we broke up into a number of groups and took different trails out to the old corrals for a snack break. Laurie B and Linda E continued up the canyon almost to Swan Falls. All returned to the parking lot with smiles and claimed they would be back for the March ride to Diamond Basin. Photo’s by Laurie, Lisa and Rob.
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Diamond Basin – Owyhee Foot hills
March 20, 2016 – Diamond Basin Corrals 43.10950,-116.60297 GPS On this almost perfect March day, 50’s with a light breeze and blue skies, 24 members and guest meet at the corrals on the old stage coach road to Sliver City. By 10:30 most had arrive and were saddled up. Terry & Phil lead off and in small groups the rest followed up the old stage coach road. We shared this road with 4-wheelers, side by sides and motor cycles. All encounters were pleasant with courtesy show by both the motorized users and the horsemen. After the 4 hour ride, we share finger food and got to know each other a bit better. A very successful ride! Photo’s by Lou Ann, Nicole, Laurie, Lisa & Rob
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Johnson Creek Fun Ride and Potluck
April 10, 2016 Johnson Creek Ride and Potluck. Johnson Creek is just outside of the once town of Montour, ID. Montour is about three miles south of Sweet, ID and was removed a number of years ago and the area became wet lands for birds and wild life on the Payette River. Regan Peak a core of an old volcano, towers over the area. Johnson Creek, is a primitive public road that heads south and if you follow it far enough you would reach the Emmett Cycle Park. On this day, we had 16 riders who enjoyed exploring the area with trail boss, Terry MacDonald. After the ride the group, joined other members at Linda and Rob Adams home in Sweet for a spring potluck. Great food was enjoyed by old and new members as they got caught up on what they had been doing over the winter months.
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08. April 2016 · Comments Off on Wildfires and Heat Waves: How To Protect Your Home and Life · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

fireThe year 2015 set new wildfire records in the United States. According to the National Interagency Fire Center, almost 10 million acres burned. Many thousands of homes burned in these fires, each one full of memories – now reduced to ashes. Over seventy fire fighters perished in their efforts to combat wildfires in the US in 2015, not to mention citizen deaths.

If you live in a seasonally dry climate with abundant flammable vegetation, your residence is vulnerable to wildland fire. Lightning, accidents, and criminals ignite these fires every year. Fire is unpredictable. If there are weaknesses in your home’s fire protection scheme, fire can gain the upper hand because of some overlooked or seemingly inconsequential factor. Don’t let that happen to you.

As a homeowner, you can take a number of steps to protect your property and reduce the spread of wildland fires. This guide provides information and lists clear action steps you can take to avoid becoming a statistic. Keep reading for more information.

Surviving a Wildfire

Two factors have emerged as the primary determinants of a home’s ability to survive wildfires: choosing fire-resistant roofing material and creating a wildfire defensible zone. First, it is important to choose a fire-resistant roofing material that is rated a minimum of class C when building a house in or near forests or grasslands. (Class B and A offer progressively better protection.) Avoid flammable materials such as wood or shake shingles. Second, create a fuel free zone around your home where fire has nothing to burn – this is called the defensible space. By creating a wildfire defensible zone, homes are less vulnerable from this naturally occurring phenomenon and the chance of spreading wildfires is greatly reduced.

If you are a homeowner and you are interested in protecting your home from wildfires, follow the FireWise guidelines. While you may not be able to accomplish all of these measures, each will increase your home’s safety and survival during a wildfire. Start with the easiest and least expensive actions. Begin your work closest to the house and move outward. Keep working on the more difficult items until you have completed your entire project.

Choose surrounding vegetation wisely: maintain a greenbelt (irrigated if possible) immediately around your home using grass, a flower garden and/or fire-resistant ornamental shrubbery. An alternative is rock or other non-combustible material, which may be preferable if your house is made of wood or other flammable materials. Avoid using bark or wood chip mulch in this area.

Read the following list for practical steps you can take to protect your home and property and preserve life.

08. April 2016 · Comments Off on Wilderness Survival Guide: How To Stay Alive if Lost, Hurt or Stranded · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

Imagine a fun afternoon hike around Mt. Baker. You’re enjoying the quiet of the forest, the dappled light shining through the trees, and the intoxicating smell of the leaves when thick fog rolls in unexpectedly at 4:00 p.m. In a panic, you follow the wrong trail for hours along a progressively steeper face until you’ve run out of daylight.

Imagine being on a snowmobile in the back-country with friends, zipping through the powder and chasing each other between the tree trunks when a blizzard sets in and the last snowmobile doesn’t show up at the rendezvous point.

Or imagine the mountain biking trip you’ve been daydreaming about for months, bombing down the mountain with the wind in your face. You get separated from your group on a tricky portion of singletrack, and decide to press on when you come to an unknown fork in the trail. Feeling exhausted and dehydrated, you take a corner too fast and crash, taco–ing your front wheel and breaking your collar bone.

Lost, hurt, stranded – these scenarios and others like them play out over three thousand times per year in the United States. Folks heading outdoors in search of adventure don’t plan on getting lost or hurt in the wilderness. It can happen to the best of us, and when it does, people underestimate the challenges of the wilderness and overestimate their own ability.

To help you avoid becoming a statistic by rightly explaining the dangers of the wilderness and ensuring that you are physically and mentally prepared for any snags during your adventures, we’ve put together this wilderness survival guide.

 

  • Stay Found – Make Survival Training a Waste of Time
  • Fear the Weather – Wilderness Enemy Number One
  • Communication – It’s Not Just For Married People
  • Buddy Up – One Is The Loneliest Number
  • Survival Kit – The New Ten Essentials, Plus…
  • Survival Priorities – Remember The Rule of 3

Read More

 

24. March 2016 · Comments Off on Got a sick horse – Call Dr. Google · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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This cartoon is obviously a joke, but as a long-time equine vet, scenarios like this are too familiar to me. Misinformation (often found on the Internet – a/k/a “Dr. Google”) leads caretakers to make guesses about their horse’s condition rather than contacting a vet. check out our local vet page on the Squaw Butte Web Site

Thank you for your interest in Horse Side Vet Guide, a mobile application for horse owners and equine professionals for the iPhone and Android. You have received this email because you signed up for more information at www.HorseSideVetGuide.com or from the app itself. Thanks!

20. March 2016 · Comments Off on Guest Opinions – Public Lands · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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New Mexico land transfer experiment ended badly for state control advocates

BY TOM RIBE

It is no secret that some state legislators in the West want to boot federal land management agencies from their states. They argue that the Bureau of Land Management and U.S. Forest Service cost too much and are too detached from local values, and that states could make money by running our vast open spaces like a privately owned business.

The Cato Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based libertarian think tank, is of that opinion and has developed models to replace federal agencies with private interests. What many people don’t know is that Congress implemented one of the Cato Institute’s ideas in 2000, on the 89,000-acre Valles Caldera National Preserve in New Mexico. For some critics of the federal government, this was the experiment in land management that would signal the end of the BLM and Forest Service in the West.

Give states chance to manage small portion of U.S. forests

BY JIM GERBER

At a Feb. 24 House Appropriations Committee meeting on the Forest Service budget, Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., suggested there might be some merit to selling off federal public lands. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, pointed out that the people of Idaho love their public lands because they use them for a wide variety of uses. They would not like to see them auctioned off.

There is a better solution than to sell off federal lands. Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, has a bill that would create experimental areas of 200,000 or more acres in several states to see whether state management of federal lands is feasible.

Idaho’s misguided attempt to legalize a Bundyesque occupation

BY KAHLE BECKER

Senate Bill 1338, brought to us by Sen. Sheryl Nuxoll R-Cottonwood, purports to allow counties to declare Federal land a “Catastrophic Public Nuisance.” The proposed legislation which then claims to allow a county or its sheriff to take steps to abate the nuisance. Presumably this means the county can order trees be logged, roads be constructed, or prescriptive fires be lit on Federal land.

BY BRIAN BROOKS

For most Idahoans, our expansive landscapes are seen as a great heritage to be explored and cherished. These lands provide quality habitat that sustains rich fish and wildlife populations that naturally draws or creates lifelong sportsmen and women. Our Idahoan character and western culture have been shaped in part by our uninhibited exploration of wild places.

BY ZANE JOSEPH BEAL

A handful of bills recently introduced in the Idaho State Legislature strike a worrisome note. These bills — SB 1338, HR 582 and HR 586 — would have the effect of introducing a measure of chaos into extant methods of public land management, and ultimately erode our capacity to preserve the natural bounty of Idaho. SB 1338 would give sheriffs and county officials the ability to unilaterally impede federal management initiatives, while HR 582 and 586 represent efforts to transfer public lands from federal to state control.

BY ED NORTHEN

Recently the Idaho Senate passed SB 1338, a bill that, if enacted, will bring disarray to land management across our state. An earlier version, drafted by out-of-state lobbyists and special interests, had to be withdrawn due to gross inaccuracies. While this version has corrected spelling errors and reduced inaccuracies about our state, it is still wrong for Idaho

16. March 2016 · Comments Off on Idaho Non-Motorized Trails Summit · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

IMG_9575Idaho Trail Enthusiasts,

The Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation (IDPR) appreciates your participation in the recent Non-Motorized Trail Recreation Summit held February 10, 2016 in Boise. We were inspired by the number of folks who care about Idaho’s trails, and the energy and dedication you brought to the meeting. As promised, we are attaching a summary of the Boise event, meeting notes and a list of attendees.

We will continue and expand this conversation with meetings in eastern and northern Idaho in the coming weeks. Before the summer recreation season, we will convene a smaller, more strategic group of recreation volunteers and leaders to consider:
– Is there an idea for increasing funding for maintenance of non-motorized trails that would work in Idaho?
– Is there sufficient public interest – and leadership within recreation user groups – to mount a successful campaign for that idea?
– Next steps?

Several of you have already volunteered to get more involved. If you would like to lend your time and effort, as an individual or on behalf of an organization, pleased be sure to reply to Betty Mills at betty.mills@idpr.idaho.gov and we will keep you informed on further developments

In the meantime, please feel free to contact members of IDPR staff with any questions you might have. We appreciate your participation and support.

IPR-meeting summary_Boise_ final

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14. March 2016 · Comments Off on Boise man seeks to make Idaho a thru-hike destination · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

ICTBy: Lacey Darrow

Posted: Mar 13, 2016

“Unlike any trail in the country, this is the biggest stretch of wilderness that you can hike,” explained Clay Jacobson, an avid thru-hiker.

Jacobson has spent months if not years of his life hiking trails across the country.

From the more than 2000 mile Appalachian Trail to the 2600 mile Pacific Crest Trail, step by step, he’s done it. Just this past summer, he took on the Idaho Centennial Trail, a nearly 1000 mile long trail stretching from Nevada to Canada.

“To go out and have that kind of experience, that life changing type of experience in Idaho just creates a bond with the place,” said Jacobson.  Jacobson says unlike the AT of the PCT, hiking the Idaho Centennial trail is literally taking the path less traveled.

Each year thousands set out to thru-hike the AT and PCT but Idaho’s thru-hike only sees a handful of folks each hiking season.

“You know the Pacific Crest Trail is a beautiful maintained trail that goes for 2700 miles. The Idaho Centennial Trail is a line on a map that you can follow on the ground sometimes, other times it disappears,” said Jacobson.

A big reason why is not only because it’s not well known, but because it passes through arguably the most remote area in the lower 48, where man is merely a visitor in the land of wolves and bears and does not remain.

“The Idaho Centennial Trail is intangible in the sense that it is more of an idea than a real trail,” explained Jacobson.

It’s the idea of a real trail that have Jacobson canvassing the state to raise awareness of the Idaho Centennial Trail and the pristine areas it passes through.

“We have a unique opportunity here in Idaho to explore these places and to protect these places. They have been protected by generations that came before us, so areas like the Frank Church and the Selway-Bitterroot wilderness, they only exist here,” said Jacobson.

Maintaining the trail comes with a price-tag. Forest service and BLM trail crews are stretched thin already.

“Maintaining and keeping the trail in hike-able conditions is a huge project. One, it’s going to take a lot of money, and two, it’s going to take a lot of people working together,” said Jacobson.

With the Centennial Trail weaving through millions of acres of wilderness, mother nature can make long stretches of the path virtually invisible in a short amount of time. Fallen trees litter the trail creating a natural obstacle course that can be difficult for even the most experienced hikers.

“The maps are not very reliable. The routes haven’t been updated, along with every year there is fire damage and trails change,” said Jacobson.

Despite these challenges, Jacobson says making the trail synonymous with long distance hiking not only for Idahoans, but for adventure seekers across the nation is as simple as more folks lacing up their boots, and going for a hike.

“You have to have people out there hiking it,” said Jacobson. “It will change the character of the trail a little bit but overall it makes it more assessable to more people.”
ICT2 Connect to ICT Website

01. March 2016 · Comments Off on Idaho Trails Association · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

ITA

Our Mission

The Idaho Trails Association promotes the continued enjoyment of Idaho’s hiking trails.

Our Purpose

To facilitate the active enjoyment of Idaho’s public lands and hiking trails, the Idaho Trails Association brings together citizens and develops partnerships to foster:

  • Care-taking of Idaho’s hiking trails through stewardship projects, including trail construction and maintenance.
  • Development of traditional trails maintenance skills.
  • Understanding and appreciation, through education, of Idaho’s unique trail resources.
  • Preservation, protection and access to Idaho’s hiking trails through outreach and advocacy.

 


 

More Information

ITA Brochure

ITA Flyer

Annual Reports

2015 Annual Report

2014 Annual Report

2013 Annual Report

2012 Annual Report

2011 Annual Report

2010 Annual Report

24. February 2016 · Comments Off on Geospatial Data – Boise National Forest GIS Data · Categories: Around The Campfire

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Links Providing More Information:    

Inside Idaho – http://inside.uidaho.edu/ – Idaho GIS Data Warehouse

ArcExplorer – http://www.esri.com/software/arcgis/explorer/download – Free GIS viewing software

Forest Service Interactive Travel Map – http://maps.fs.fed.us/TravelAccess/

Boise National Forest: Recreation Information

18. February 2016 · Comments Off on Parks and Rec Looks for a Way to Fund Idaho’s Trails Before They’re Gone · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

iptrOn February 11, 2016 Phil Ryan, Bill Holt, Robbin Schindele, Rob Adams and over one hundred other concerned users of non-motorized trail met at the Andrus Center for Public Policy. The Idaho Parks & Rec “Summit on Non-Motorized Trail Recreation in Idaho” was organized by Leo Hennessy, the non-motorized trails program manager for Idaho Parks and Recreation, who is worried about trails. READ MORE

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READ MORE

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01. February 2016 · Comments Off on How to safely back a trailer at 60 mph · Categories: Around The Campfire

TrailerVidClick on Picture to Watch!

31. January 2016 · Comments Off on Keep public lands in public hands · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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BY JIM CASWELL January 27, 2016 (Guest Opinions – Idaho Statesman)

America’s national forests, refuges and other public lands are one of the most successful ideas our nation has ever created, and it’s heart-wrenching to see them at the center of a dispute that has spiraled needlessly into violence and the loss of life.

Whether it’s self-styled militants in Oregon or legislators in Boise, there is little sense in painting a target on a resource that has benefited so many for so long.

Together, Americans own 193 million acres of national forests and 245 million acres managed by the Bureau of Land Management. These lands have been a vital part of the nation’s fabric for a century, providing sustained yields of timber and valuable minerals, world-class fish and wildlife, vast recreational opportunities and drinking water.

As one who spent 40 years in public land management for federal agencies and the state of Idaho, I’ve seen my share of disputes over public lands and resources. It hasn’t always been pretty, but amid disagreements, there’s always been recognition of how vital public lands are to the American people and especially to the health of many Western economies and communities.

When laws are broken and public lands exploited, local communities suffer most. Westerners know this, which is why collaboration and forging common ground — not breaking the law — are the norm for settling disagreements.

Situations like an armed takeover usually happen when outsiders exploit a situation for self-interest. The consistent attempts in Idaho and other legislatures to seize control of public lands are a perfect example. Public land grab efforts almost never rise up from local communities. They are instead galvanized by partisan politics, mainly at the national level, where the real agenda is wresting public lands from public hands and ultimately privatizing them for nonpublic uses.

As a forest supervisor and director of the BLM during the George W. Bush administration, I know well there are problems with the current public lands system that need fixing. Managing public lands for multiple uses is complicated, and the task is growing more so as America grows and changes.

Given the complexities, it’s difficult to find the right balance. In almost every decision land managers make, someone is displeased.

But the answer is certainly not taking away public lands, as some would have us believe. “Transferring control” of public lands to states will almost surely result in parcels being auctioned off; states simply can’t afford the management costs. Once public lands are privatized, Americans will lose access to them, forever.

Instead of a massive land transfer, we should work for solutions that keep public lands in public hands. Any solution has to start with local communities. Luckily, this is something Idaho knows how to do.

When Idaho developed its own federal rule for managing national forest roadless areas, we reached out to counties and asked them to lead the effort. Working with folks on the ground — hunters, anglers, campers, loggers, foresters and biologists — county commissioners embraced the challenge. In the end, Idaho ended up with a plan that, through hard work and compromise, addressed the needs of everyone involved.

There’s a valuable lesson here. The entire land transfer debate is driven by national politics. Much like the standoff in Oregon, it reeks of outside influence and does not serve the people of Idaho.

Frustration around public lands is real. But that doesn’t make violence the right response or land transfers a realistic solution. The best answer to our problems is to join hands to fix the management, and to keep the truly greedy hands driving this debate off our public lands.

Jim Caswell served as director of the Bureau of Land Management under Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne. He also headed Idaho’s Office of Species Conservation under Govs. Kempthorne, Risch and Otter.

Read more here:

http://www.idahostatesman.com/opinion/readers-opinion/article56933223.html#storylink=cpy

26. January 2016 · Comments Off on National Trails Resources & Library · Categories: Around The Campfire

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23. January 2016 · Comments Off on Idahoans deserve better than Labrador’s absurd posturing over Malheur · Categories: Around The Campfire, Current Events

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BY KEVIN LEWIS

Leave it to Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, to take advantage of an escalating bad situation in Oregon to espouse his views on how “federal” land management “strips hardworking Americans of the ability to profit from their labors.”

Let’s get one thing straight: This is not federal land. It is public land. The Malheur National Wildlife Refuge is owned by Americans from Anchorage to Miami. It is not owned, and never has been, by the likes of the gun-toting seditionists who are holed up in the refuge headquarters. Whether it’s the Malheur Refuge, or the Hells Canyon National Recreation Area, or the City of Rocks National Monument, America’s public lands are managed for the benefit of millions of Americans — not just the parochial “profit” interests of the livestock, logging and mining industries Labrador champions.

Americans own our public lands, and we’ve hired the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management to provide the stewardship that will provide all of us the benefits we as a nation have identified that those lands should provide. Clean water. Clean air. Open space. Wildlife. Fish. Recreation. Every day the stewards of our public lands balance as best they can these resources and values.

These public lands were secured from the depredations of profit-driven industries by the vision of people like President Theodore Roosevelt, who recognized that without proactive steps these lands would be overrun by those who see nothing but a bottom line of their personal wealth. Thanks to the reservation of public lands, we in Idaho still can enjoy cedar trees that were old when Lewis and Clark came through and rivers that are as wild as they were when Idaho became a state. This good fortune was not an accident. It came about by the foresight of others before who long recognized that too often “profit” translates to muddy streams, clear-cut hillsides and overgrazed deserts.

Equally disturbing is Labrador’s attempt to trivialize the crimes for which the Hammonds were convicted. The transcript of the Hammonds’ court case is clear on the magnitude of the crimes for which they are now serving the remainder of their sentences. One of the basic foundations of this great nation is the rule of law. The Hammonds broke the law and are now paying the price.

Labrador’s labeling the felonious actions of an armed mob as “civil disobedience” is an embarrassment for the citizens of Idaho. Idahoans deserve public officials who respect the law instead of providing a platform for those who believe that they have a right to force their minority opinion upon the nation with the threat of armed violence.

There’s no patriotism involved in the Oregon situation. Those championing the seditionists want to turn back the clock on Idaho and America’s public lands to nearly a century ago, to when wildlife, clean water and clean air came in poor seconds to “profits.”

Kevin Lewis, of Boise, has spent a lifetime recreating on public lands throughout the West.