ace said:We should meet at the crossroads and show up in force 12 minutes fashionably late.
TK1 said:Kurt, we'll probably see you at the Chevron. Our group from UXOC is meeting there as well.
Greens, off-roaders team up to tidy canyon
Public Lands Day: The Wasatch-Cache National Forest gets some repairs for damage done by users
By Arrin Newton Brunson
Special to the Tribune
MILLVILLE CANYON - Helping hands easily hefted a lightweight love seat Saturday morning, but when it came to moving an antique wood-burning stove, determined volunteers decided to haul the weighty cast-iron appliance with a four-wheel-drive Jeep and an 8,000-pound winch.
The unconventional moving crew found many other household items far from home in the Logan Ranger District of the Wasatch-Cache National Forest. Volunteers celebrated National Public Lands Day in Millville Canyon by picking up trash, repairing Forest Service signs, constructing a fence to thwart illegal vehicle traffic at the mouth of a spring, and tearing down a shanty.
Richmond resident Dan Miller, coordinator of the Bear River Watershed Council, co-sponsored the cleanup using data provided by volunteers who walk all of the roads in the Logan District and compile off-road vehicle impacts as part of the Motorized Use Data (MUD) project.
Saturday's canyon cleanup project was an opportunity for people who use public lands to give back and contribute to the places they care about, said Kate Stephens, program coordinator for Utah Conservation Corps, a nonprofit group that cosponsored the activity.
"For people who are going to gripe about ORV use, this is an opportunity to walk the talk and be a part of the solution," Stephens said.
Ironically, it was members of an often-criticized group - "wheelers" - who made the most difficult work possible Saturday, according to Logan Ranger District Manager Rob Cruz, who referred to members of an Ogden four-wheel-drive club as "The Cavalry."
The Wasatch Outlaws scarcely lived up to their names when they transported volunteers across otherwise impassible terrain and worked side by side to remove any sign of human presence in the forest. In his '88 Jeep Wrangler, stocked with boomerang shackles and wide, climber tires, Shaun Howard, of Brigham City, easily scaled rocks and traversed wet areas of the trail where streams seeped over their banks.
"The mountains are for all of us to use," Howard said. "There are a lot of people that come up here and abuse the mountain and those are the people that need to be disciplined."
Volunteer Gayle Knapp, of Providence, is a master gardener who said she felt really good about the day's work.
An A-frame lean-to was pulled down and dozens of logs that comprised the steep sides of the shelter were sawed in half and dispersed throughout the area to decompose.
Knapp and her husband, Bruce Copeland, are hikers and trail runners who often find more to look at in the forest than they'd like.
"We see an awful lot of general misuse and it's not restricted to the wheeled vehicles," Knapp said.
"Everybody should be careful and stay on the trails."
Meat_ said:How did this turn out Kurt?
Meat_ said:...I assume the Sheriff gives paperwork to scrap the car? I've got an empty trailer in the driveway if someone wants to drag a car on to it.
Meat_ said:So you just take it to the scrap yard of your choice?
How bad of places are the remaining cars?
Meat_ said:Ok, so do they have provisions for going and hauling the cars out without thier presence?