AlaskaHunter
Well-known member
This is part of the writeup in the Fairbanks Newspaper following the 40-mile caribou hunt:
“Devastation is an understatement,” he said of the trail wreckage. “The aesthetic is completely gone.”
This year the BLM took time to place warning signs instructing hunters and ATV users to stay off the hiking trails when using vehicles.
Many of these signs were ignored and as much as mile-long stretches of the trail have been littered with ruts that cut deep into the mud and leave the trail relatively unusable.
The BLM had placed plastic grating filled in with gravel, called Geoblock, across some of the wetter parts of the hiking path over the last few years to allow backpackers and hikers to easily walk across the boggy areas. Many of those grates were driven across and buried in feet of mud. "
Here is a photo I took in July, and a photo after the hunt was closed:
Thousands of dollars were invested in the geoblocks to protect the alpine tundra.
Another reason why the general public sometimes has a low opinion of hunters...
“Devastation is an understatement,” he said of the trail wreckage. “The aesthetic is completely gone.”
This year the BLM took time to place warning signs instructing hunters and ATV users to stay off the hiking trails when using vehicles.
Many of these signs were ignored and as much as mile-long stretches of the trail have been littered with ruts that cut deep into the mud and leave the trail relatively unusable.
The BLM had placed plastic grating filled in with gravel, called Geoblock, across some of the wetter parts of the hiking path over the last few years to allow backpackers and hikers to easily walk across the boggy areas. Many of those grates were driven across and buried in feet of mud. "
Here is a photo I took in July, and a photo after the hunt was closed:
Thousands of dollars were invested in the geoblocks to protect the alpine tundra.
Another reason why the general public sometimes has a low opinion of hunters...