SPP via Weyerhauser (#1) via Plum Creek...They’re still allowing quite a bit of access. When news of that sale broke, a lot of hunters were freaked out. I don’t hunt that area, but know people who do and have for generations. It could have been a disaster.
Caleb is a solid dude and a good forester. I worked with him at my past job.
#1 Weyerhauser, we sold a corner piece of our Whitefish property to allow their logging trucks access to their property w/o routing through a corner of State land.
In the agreement, they would continue offering access to our land that bordered theirs. Unfortunately, w/o forethought and with the general impression that would convey to future owners, I did not pay an attorney to review and define.
Southern Pines Plantation took over (as we know) and just like that, signs noting private property. The owner, whom I don't recall his name took that land, redefined the Whitefish watershed land segments and made my bordering parcel his own private land for his Whitefish house, etc. I contacted Weyerhauser who in turn contacted SPP, and I received a call from the owner's personal attorney, that gave us private consent to ride horses and allow my daughter and us the opportunity to continue hiking, camping, with prior notice though no longer access to hunt.
His property, his right, my bad for not having an attorney review.
***Along with this, numerous electrical residential units (large green metal containers every couple hundred yards or so) added along the dirt road our family rode horses and I hunted for wolves, elk, deer, and bear.
I've since sold my property for a nice covid mint though, SPP is certainly about real estate over public access.
Nature of the beast.
I hope people stand up OUTSIDE entrenched partisan placement and conside our children's future for Montana accessibility.