Posted inJanuary 23, 2006: Timberlands up for grabs

Seniors reject more wilderness access

Erik Schultz’s piece about his tragic fall, which left him a paraplegic and unable to savor the wilderness, makes a (HCN, 12/12/05: Wheelchairs and wilderness can coexist). Why? If it’s a choice between personal satisfaction and wilderness protection, we must choose wilderness. Bob Marshall, Ed Abbey, Aldo Leopold — all considered mechanization of wild nature […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 2006: Timberlands up for grabs

Seniors want more wilderness access

Regarding Erik Schultz’s column, “Wheelchairs and Wilderness Can Co-exist” (HCN, 12/12/05: Wheelchairs and wilderness can coexist): Erik and Congressman Simpson are to be congratulated for the progress they have made in opening a wilderness area to handicapped persons — be it ever so small. I look from another perspective — that of aging senior citizens. […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 2006: Timberlands up for grabs

No bipartisan support for Boulder-White Clouds Wilderness

Laura Paskus’ article on the Ojito Wilderness mentions the proposal for the Boulder-White Clouds in Idaho, an omnibus lands bill that includes some wilderness designation (HCN, 11/28/05: The little wilderness that could). Paskus states that this legislation has “bipartisan support,” when in fact its only sponsors are Mike Simpson of Idaho and Jim Saxton of […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 2006: Timberlands up for grabs

Colorado River gets a recreation plan

The National Park Service’s new plan for the Grand Canyon river corridor may torpedo wilderness advocates, who are already swimming against a tide of motorboats and helicopters. Ten years ago, the Grand Canyon Management Plan required park managers to devise a new recreation strategy for the Colorado River that would address motorized usage, tourism’s impacts […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 2006: Timberlands up for grabs

Forest Service shuts down ‘three old geezers’

Eighty-year-old retiree Stewart Brandborg wouldn’t appear threatening to most people in his hometown, Hamilton. Brandborg’s father, Guy, ran the Bitterroot National Forest, headquartered in the town, from 1935 to 1955. Brandborg’s own career included stints with the Forest Service and national conservation groups. But when Brandborg tried to attend a forest press conference in Hamilton […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 2006: Timberlands up for grabs

Bear killing increases but protection decreases

“We call these vandal killings,” says Chris Servheen, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service grizzly bear recovery coordinator, “people who just kill things and let them lay.” He’s talking about the 11 grizzly bears that were killed illegally last year in northwestern Montana; one was poisoned and the rest were shot or otherwise killed. In 2004, […]

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