Millville Canyon project brings together all sorts of backcountry users

Seth

These go to 11
Kudos to the Outlaws and Dan at BRWC. This is an example of how things are going to have to work if we have hope of maintaing access.


Millville Canyon project brings together all sorts of backcountry users
By Tom Wharton
The Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated: 06/02/2008 12:58:31 AM MDT

MILLVILLE - Environmentalists, ATV riders, four-wheel-drive enthusiasts, hunters, Boy Scouts and horseback riders seldom see eye to eye on anything to do with public lands and their management.
So what were more than 100 people representing all of those groups doing working together in Millville Canyon south of Logan this weekend?
Wasatch Outlaws Four-Wheel Drive Club member Shaun Howard, of Brigham City, had a simple explanation.
"All of these groups have the same goal, which is to preserve the mountain forever," he said. "We might have different viewpoints about how the mountain should be used but we can still want to come together like this."
The work project on the Logan Ranger District of the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest brought together groups that often demonize each other when debating how public lands might be used.
Organized under the auspices of the Bear River Watershed Council, the weekend's work project included volunteers from the Backcountry Volunteers, the Wasatch Outlaws, Bridgerland Audubon Society, a Boy Scout group from nearby Hyrum, the Bridgerland Trail Riders Association ATV group and the Utah Backcountry Horsemen, as well as dedicated hunters.
Dan Miller, executive director of the Bear River Watershed Council, chose his words carefully when describing what the volunteers enjoying beautiful spring weather, aDutch oven dinner and a lot of hard work were trying to accomplish.
Knowing that using the word "closed" might alienate motorized recreation users, he said the project, that included building barriers and placing obstructions to block use of about 7 1/2 miles of illegal motorized trails in the canyon, was a "restoration."
He said he had no problems with motorized users enjoying the 5 1/2 miles of legal roads in the canyon developed decades ago and providing the only motorized access to the popular Shoshone ATV trail in this area.
"We've never advocated shutting this canyon down," he said. "It's in bad shape but if we get things under control, it should stay open, no doubt about it."
One of the most useful parts of the projects involved volunteers using the skills of Wes Thompson, a hydro-geologist from Bio-West, to create water bars to divert flowing water off the rugged dirt road to control sediment and erosion.
Jennefer Parker, the Logan District ranger for the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest, called the resource value of what the hard working volunteers did "dramatic."
"We can't do this ourselves," she said, adding that responsible motorized groups that promote legal trail use are effective in preserving access.
Still, in an era where user groups seem more inclined to fight and go to court than to work together, it seemed strange to see motorized trail users putting up barriers to limit use.
Four-wheel enthusiast Larry Olsen of Ogden said groups like the Wasatch Outlaws have worked on projects such as this one for a long time. He passed out bumper stickers proclaiming four-wheelers as true environmentalists.
"When we start working together, we find that we're not all that different," said four-wheeler John Fritsche, of Ogden.
"This encourages people to stay on the trail," added four-wheeler Fred Westra, of Clearfield.
Guy Perkins, who works for Cache County-based Camp Chef and is an avid hunter, including being a member of the Cache Mule Deer Recovery Group, brought some hunters into the mix in an effort to preserve both habitat and some motorized access.
On the other end of the spectrum, members of the Backcountry Volunteers backpacked to near the top of the canyon to help with the project and paid $100 to participate.
At the end of the day, with barriers up blocking illegal routes and newly built water bars diverting water off the eroding main road into the natural streambed, many members of the groups enjoyed one another's company and dinner in a green meadow.
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* TOM WHARTON can be contacted at wharton@sltrib.com. His phone number is 801-257-8909. Send comments about this story to livingeditor@sltrib.com.
 

Seth

These go to 11
Editorial of the article.

http://www.sltrib.com/opinion/ci_9502081

Peace parley: Divergent interests converge in the forest
Tribune Editorial
Article Last Updated: 06/06/2008 10:34:07 AM MDT

The popular notion is that passive-recreation lovers and off-road-vehicle enthusiasts are eternally at odds, like cats and dogs. In that light, a work detail in Millville Canyon near Logan last weekend was a mythbuster.
Assorted gearheads and treehuggers - environmentalists, hunters, horseback riders, birdwatchers, Boy Scouts, backpackers, all-terrain-vehicle riders and four-wheel-drive aficionados - worked side by side in the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest on a restoration project.
To what do we owe this surprise gathering orchestrated by the Bear River Watershed Council? A court order? Nope. It was a voluntary meshing of muscle and meeting of the minds, an acknowledgment that a mutual love of public lands and the great outdoors outweighs the difference of opinion on how those lands should be enjoyed.
It doesn't happen often enough. The animosity that too often lands the opposing interests in court are understandable, and perhaps unavoidable.
While bicyclists, birdwatchers, horseback riders and hikers go about their business unobtrusively, and say they leave nothing but footprints behind, those who take to the forests, deserts and plains on motorized machines disturb the silence and leave unsightly evidence of their passing.
Conversely, those who travel the public lands on their heels instead of wheels have access to every inch of ground and despair to share,
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to the chagrin of motorized users, who also pay their taxes and stake claim to the land.
The differences of opinion were laid aside last weekend, and the land they all love was the primary beneficiary.
To fight soil erosion and stream sedimentation caused by unauthorized OHV and ATV riding, the group constructed diversion "bars" to channel runoff away from the dirt roads. And to channel riders toward the canyon's 5.5 miles of legal roads and allow the illegal trails a chance to heal, they constructed roadblocks to deny access to the small minority of riders who flout the rules.
ATV and OHV enthusiasts used their vehicles to carry shovels and tools into the canyon, and the assorted groups with divergent interests gathered as one to restore damaged areas and assure, through cooperation and newly forged alliances, future access for all.
It won't signal an end to the conflict. But it's a good start.
 
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