Ursidae69
Traveller
Excellent post Martyn, but I want to disagree with your assertion that I bolded below. At least here in New Mexico I think the conscientious users are the minority, a huge minority. I see it everyday.
The folks who do organized trail runs actually do tread lightly and organize trail cleanups, etc., but on any given day, the BLM land near my house is inundated with quads and none of them have the OHV permits required in NM. They make new trails every day. None of these illiterates are online and know what tread lightly means or know that their actions are causing huge tracts of land to close. The nearest BLM office is in Taos 50 miles away and so is their enforcement officer. Head further up into the hills into Forest Service land and you’ll find the woodcutters. Wood cutting and collecting is big business here and if nobody checked to see if you have your 5 dollar tag, how many will actually go get one? The woodcutters make tons of illegal roads to get to the trees they want to harvest. The BLM and FS maps for my area are missing hundreds of miles of illegal roads that are being made all over. I shouldn’t overlook the illegal dumpers. At my bird banding site on BLM land about ten miles from here I have more than 20 illegal dumping sites along the one-mile stretch of road to my site.
How can they fix that problem? The best answer is to have law enforcement, but it is pretty much non-existent. With annual budget cuts and a skeleton staff, what else can land managers do to stop the abuse other than close land?
I’ll err on the side of closing the land rather than see it abused un-checked. I can say that and still drive my fossil fuel burning truck and sleep just fine at night. I wish the “ra-ra I hate the greenie crowd” would at least recognize and admit that there is a problem rather than playing the “horrible elitist greenie” card every time. :smilies27
The folks who do organized trail runs actually do tread lightly and organize trail cleanups, etc., but on any given day, the BLM land near my house is inundated with quads and none of them have the OHV permits required in NM. They make new trails every day. None of these illiterates are online and know what tread lightly means or know that their actions are causing huge tracts of land to close. The nearest BLM office is in Taos 50 miles away and so is their enforcement officer. Head further up into the hills into Forest Service land and you’ll find the woodcutters. Wood cutting and collecting is big business here and if nobody checked to see if you have your 5 dollar tag, how many will actually go get one? The woodcutters make tons of illegal roads to get to the trees they want to harvest. The BLM and FS maps for my area are missing hundreds of miles of illegal roads that are being made all over. I shouldn’t overlook the illegal dumpers. At my bird banding site on BLM land about ten miles from here I have more than 20 illegal dumping sites along the one-mile stretch of road to my site.
How can they fix that problem? The best answer is to have law enforcement, but it is pretty much non-existent. With annual budget cuts and a skeleton staff, what else can land managers do to stop the abuse other than close land?
I’ll err on the side of closing the land rather than see it abused un-checked. I can say that and still drive my fossil fuel burning truck and sleep just fine at night. I wish the “ra-ra I hate the greenie crowd” would at least recognize and admit that there is a problem rather than playing the “horrible elitist greenie” card every time. :smilies27
I believe the reality of the situation is that not all the trails will remain open, and to expect them to remain open is a loosing battle. At the same time to close access to all trails is also not a reality, the direction to move in is a compromise between the two.
Some trails and areas are just too environmentally fragile to remain open to vehicle access, or they have suffered so much degradation that they need to be closed.
Other areas need to be set aside as wilderness areas to retain their pristine beauty.
From personal experience what I see in the back country is a majority that respect the environment that they are surrounded by, and a minority who abuse it. It's the minority who get all the attention, but that's the away it is.
I wish that there was an organization to support that had a belief structure closer to my own, but they all seem to polarized.
We aren't getting very far here hurtling abuse at agavelvr. It just displays how divided the community is.
If we want to move ahead and keep what is open still open we need to take responsibility for policing the people who are destroying the land we love.