My response: I cc'ed the "Feedback" and the "Letters to the Editor" people.
Subject: Your column on "Unnatural acts" - Sun, May 25, 2008
From:
[email protected] Date: 25 May 2008 13:37:00 MDT (CA)
To:
[email protected] Cc:
[email protected],
[email protected]Hon. Minister Ted Morton speaks the truth about "More trails".
After last years debacle in the Indian Graves area. This years offroad festival that is the May Long weekend pales in comparison. (No burned out cars, no living room sets left behind, and a resectable amount of garbage and trash placed by the campers into appropriate and provided receptacles).
SRD has essential compounded the issue. After the complete closure of the Indian Graves area, and the partial closure of the Waiparous area. The only place left for quality and challenging, designated OHV trails is the McLean Creek area.
So all the users (and abusers) of the other areas within a 2 hour drive from Calgary are forced, no, shoehorned; into one tiny area.
McLean creek is the only OHV designated area where Jeeps, Quads, and Motorbikes can run the trails together. Unless the trail is a designated single-track trail, for motorcycle use only.
Trail use segregation is quite likely coming to the McLean area, as the GAMP (Ghost Area Management Plan) did for the Waiparous region. Trucks on truck trails, quads on theirs, bikes on their trail systems.
One thing you neglected to mention is, McLean creek is a designated OHV (Off Highway Vehicle) area. If anyone as a hiker or boater or mountain biker wants to come and do their thing in an OHV designated area. Then they as users of that area had better be prepared for the roar of engines and the braaap-brraaap from a two-stroke motor.
I as an OHV enthusiast do not take my equipment and go play in designated hiking and mountain bike trails. Not only is there legislation preventing me, I don't think that doing so is a proper etiquette.
Trail segregation has been long taking place, hence hikers and bikers have their playgrounds, and we as OHV users have ours.
I as an avid Jeep driver and 4x4 enthusiast (or Wheeler as we are known), belong to the Calgary Jeep Association (The CJA,
www.calgaryjeep.com), the Alberta United Recreationist Society (The AURS,
www.aurs.org), the Alberta 4 Wheel Drive Association (The AB4WD,
www.ab4wd.com); I adhere to a myriad of common sense, self governed rulesets. I clean up after myself and others, I respect the trails, the land the trails are on, and the other users of those areas. What we pack in, we pack out. We also adhere to the Tread Lightly (
http://www.treadlightly.org), principals and guidelines. And apparently we use our highly developed human brains.
The closure of the Indian Graves are last year angered me. Due to the (in)actions of a select few, the avid and responsible users of that area were left without an area with challenging trails and beautiful scenery. In the end, a knee-jerk reaction to the actions of a select few, punished an entire spectrum of responsible users of that area.
You as an avid hiker, have no place arguing over how a Designated Off-Highway Vehicle area should be closed, and our hobbies and equipment should be banned. I don't poke fun at your spandex shorts, three piece pants and tilly hat. Don't make fun of my hobby, or call me a knuckle-dragging yahoo!
To paint all off road users with your broad sensationalist (and derogatory) brush, does not help resolve the issue. Nor does it provoke some sort of thought process into how these areas, the users, and their attitudes can be improved. There will always be those types of users who like nothing better than spinning their tires, while playing in the mud. So long as there is motorsport, there will be those types of drivers, and the earth will suffer.
Then there are responsible 4x4 users. Who enjoy the views, enjoy challenging trails, with steep cutlines, the possibility of rollovers, the technical driving that goes along with those obstacles. We are out there for the beautiful day, the spectacular scenery outside our great city, and to be thankful that we live in a country where these magnificent natural resources are so close to home, and can be accessed in a multitude of ways.
I invite you to come along with the CJA, or the AURS, or the AB4WD; and see what responsible 4x4 use looks like. Then perhaps I can feel less like a knuckle-dragger, and more like a human for enjoying my hobby, and enjoying and preserving my playground.
Thanks for listening.
Chris
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Chris Lobkowicz (VA6CPL)
[email protected]403-xyx-yxyx
(address blocked out) NW
Calgary, AB
T3Kxxx