Most summers, letters to the editor seem to show up in the local
paper, decrying the number of users in the national forests surrounding
Crested Butte. The message is usually focused on the number of motorized
users on public lands, often citing noise, trail impacts, dust and sometimes
even a lack of common courtesy. The letter usually ends with the upset
author threatening that he or she will never return to the Crested Butte
area and will tell all of his or her family and friends to avoid us like
the plague. Experiences like these are blamed on multiple use (it's motorized
now, but the mountain bikers in the know see that their turn is coming,
too). What the bad guys and girls don't want you to understand is that
education, not restriction, is the solution.
With the
Gunnison being so large and diverse in terms of use opportunities, users
expecting a homogenous Forest, especially one that provides a wilderness
setting, will be surprised at the variety of use found here. Different
areas receive different use--that's a fact--anyone who doesn't think the
National Forest can accommodate a variety of uses is a probably a little
short on perspective. Prepare users in terms of what to expect in any
given area and they can better choose which areas they want to recreate
in. Here are some brief suggestions for users in a few of the larger user
groups. Jim Dawson head ranger for the Gunnison National Forest has encouraged
his office to encourage use in certain places-you might check their offices
in Gunnison for similar information.

This hiker
has to be psyched with all the exceptional wildernes areas in the Gunnison
Natinal Forest, to say nothing of the expanses of wilderness in adjoining
Forests.
A hiker looking
to avoid contact with mechanized users can access the Gunnison Forest's
400,000-plus acres of wilderness (with several tens of thousands more
just north in the White River National Forest) at a number of different
trailheads. If you want to access it from the town of Crested Butte, head
out the non-motorized Lower Loop and hike to the Raggeds Wilderness-talk
about the convenience of having it in your back yard! The West Elk Wilderness
is mammoth chunk of the Gunnison National Forest and can accessed from
many locations along Ohio Creek Road. The Mill Castle Trail is a popular
starting point . . . head off of that trail in any direction for 30 minutes
and the peace and quiet of the woods will be all yours. If you're looking
for wilderness that you can access without having to leave the pavement,
head for the Fossil Ridge Wilderness and the Summerville Trail. Typical
weekends see one or two cars in the parking lot at the Summerville Trailhead,
all day long. You'll have this tree museum all to yourself! If you're
looking for something closer to Crested Butte, but a little ways from
town, head out the Gothic corridor for the Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness.
You can access this from a number of trailheads, including those at Judd
Falls, Schofield Pass, and Schofield Park. What a great way to hike to
Aspen! If you're still feeling that you're down on Wilderness options
in the Gunnison, head for the north end of Taylor Park. You'll have to
interact with vast variety of users in Taylor Park to get to the Collegiate
Peaks Wilderness, but there are huge, nonmechanized areas out there just
waiting for you.

These
mountain bikers are enjoying #401, one of the many great non-motorized
single tracks within easy access of Crested Butte.
A mountain
biker looking to avoid motorized users can take advantage of a number
of non-motorized single track options at the north end of the East River
Valley. #403, #401 and Deer Creek and the Dyke Trail are epic routes (we
don't use "epic" loosely-it's truly amazing stuff) that will
provide a couple days of riding for all but the marathon bike riders.
Add to those the Upper Loop, Upper Upper Loop, the Lower Loop, the well-maintained
single track at the ski area, the Snodgrass trail system and a few odd
"secret" trails punched in by locals, crossing private land,
and you have ridden for days without being on a motorized single track.
If you're willing to put up with some motorized company and have the legs
for some longer rides, your options will increase ten-fold. But keep in
mind that you're heading onto multi-use trails where folks like to ride
their motorized toys as hard as you like to push your ride through the
swinging single track that makes the Gunnison Basin so special. Pedaling
these routes is a blast and the majority of motorized users you meet are
pleasant and glad to share the trails with you.
Motorized
users share multi-use trails with all users, but will probably find more
of what they are looking for in the Taylor Park, Spring Creek, Sargents
and Lost Canyon areas. There are many excellent staging areas to access
these great trails-if you have questions about where to start from and
what to connect, become a CBTRA member and we'll get you pointed in the
right direction.
There is
plenty of great recreating to be had on the Gunnison National Forest for
ALL users. Shutting down trails just concentrates use and increases impacts
in other areas for the affected user group. You may not hear about the
opportunities for some forms of recreation, like hiking, for instance.
The greener folks would evidently rather have you go somewhere motorized,
get upset and complain about the lack of a wilderness-quality experience
in a multi-use area. Help yourself and your user group to one of the many
areas that have the qualities that you or they are looking for and we
can all have a wonderful time enjoying the Gunnison National Forest.

These
two CBTRA members are grinning because they're about solutions for the
Gunnison. And probably because they were having a great day checking
out the roads and trails in the Fossil Ridge Recreaction Management
Area. |