Off-roading banned in Utah area

IntrepidXJ

NAXJA Member #647
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/...n/4201931.html


By PAUL FOY Associated Press Writer


SALT LAKE CITY — To protect two rare species of cactus, federal officials Wednesday banned off-road vehicles from a large swath of southern Utah's badlands.


The U.S. Bureau of Land Management outlawed off-roading in most of a 222 square-mile area of public land near Factory Butte, a towering monolith that is one of the state's most distinctive geological formations. Riders can still travel on designated routes through the remote area.


The move is meant to protect two species of cactus, the endangered Wright fishhook and the threatened Winkler, that are indigenous only to the area. Environmentalists have complained that motorized vehicles were crushing and killing the delicate plants.


"This was what we consider to be the best solution to protect the cacti and continue to provide access for motorized recreation in the area," BLM spokeswoman Davida Carnahan said.


Off-roaders, who come by the thousands each year to traverse the area's lunar-like landscape, complained about the ruling.


"If you could design a landscape that's ideal for off-road recreation, this is it," said Rainer Huck, president of the Utah Shared Access Alliance, the state's largest off-road group. "It's a sad story. We've been working for months to get this postponed or modified."


Environmentalists welcomed the decision.


"Once the (bureau) officials took a close look at the scars, soil erosion and damage to rare cacti protected under the Endangered Species Act, they realized that Factory Butte called out for immediate rescue," said Heidi McIntosh of the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.



Factory Butte: http://www.ut.blm.gov/factorybutte/index.htm
 
I'm not familiar with the area, but usually it's just a handfull of A-holes who screw stuff like this up for all of us. How freakin' hard can it be to not hit a cactus, even a little one like a prickly pear? They show up forever!

Now watch some smart-ass locals ignore this new rule and they'll close even the areas that are open now. I hope not, but that seems to be the way it goes.
 
Fish'nCarz said:
I'm not familiar with the area, but usually it's just a handfull of A-holes who screw stuff like this up for all of us. How freakin' hard can it be to not hit a cactus, even a little one like a prickly pear? They show up forever!

Now watch some smart-ass locals ignore this new rule and they'll close even the areas that are open now. I hope not, but that seems to be the way it goes.
You are blaming the wrong people. This area has been used for years and years and yet those cacti are still there.

It's the jerks with SUWA who don't want us to have access to anything that are the issue. They come up with all this crap about endangered plants and don't even have to prove it.
 
I'm a pretty major tree hugger myself, but we can't wheel in wilderness areas so why would SUWA give a f*ck, unless they want to turn ALL of southern Utah into a wilderness. Well, they probably do! 8^(

The push and pull between competing land uses has always been there and probably always will be as there are more people competeing for a shrinking resource base. And like I said above, one dick can give our opponents tons of ammunition to oppose our sport in just a good day of wheelin'. But I'm just preaching to the choir here. . . . .
 
Back
Top