snobuilder
Well-known member
I will stay off a it with my 121"er.
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By the way, just because I have not seen fresh tracks the last two Sundays, does not mean it does not happen. I have seen those hills with tracks everywhere on them. But, the fence up top has helped, I hope.
go pull some weeds in your yard for me....you can't...the ground is frozen...we have all seen snirty trails in many locations and come spring they turn out to be the greenest patches in the field....Stop letting the self-proclaimed environmentalistst own you...they is Full-of-it, no proof of fact, catered to bunch of control freaks ever to inhabit the earth....meanwhile i will keep an eye on the news next rainy day in the UP waiting to hear about a highway closure due to sledders tearin it up...![]()
go pull some weeds in your yard for me....you can't...the ground is frozen...
If there is a fence up and signs posted, and someone still finds ways to justify that it is ok to run up and down the hill, you will not change their mind. To me this is really simple, a fence and signs mean keep out. It does not matter if you believe it does damage or not, stay off the hill.
Kinda what I was thinking, too. It's fine to not believe or to dispute their reasons for keeping sleds out. But taking the attitude of "I'm gonna do what I want to do where I want to do it, and you can't stop me" sure isn't going to change their minds. And most importantly, it's not going to cast sledders in a favorable light to the non-sledding public. All it will do is reinforce the beliefs of those who think we're a bunch of knuckle-draggers.
Not sure why you guys think it is OK to disobey signs and fences.
I ride trails.
I think you completely misread what I was saying. And I'm a trail rider too, so I really have no horse in this race other than ALL snowmobilers get a bad name because of the actions of a few morons.
It's fine to not believe or to dispute their reasons for keeping sleds out.
It's also easy and self-serving to deny the truth. Having worked on the land and in the forests of the Upper Peninsula for the past 35 years, I have an intimate knowledge and understanding of the soils and landscapes of the region, including the area along the Ontonagon River in the vicinity of Military Hill. If you dig a 6 foot deep hole up there you will find evidence of rotational slumping and landslide including buried trees and forest debris. It is one of the most active and susceptible landscapes in the U.P., and the process of land movement has been going on long before people even existed up here and is ongoing. It is wise to try to protect this area as much as possible, because the danger of triggering or accelerating these natural processes is very real.
Please spare me the global warming jokes, but just because the climate of the earth is naturally changing and has been for a long time before man doesn't mean that we don't have a profound impact on our environment. Some great forests that have been clear cut have never grown back because the soils eroded and the microclimate changed. Areas that once had great agriculture are now deserts because the natural balance was irreversibly upset. The jokes aren't so funny if you find yourself without food or any way to get it. I know it's a hard opinion to believe, but I for one am appreciative and thankful for the security and comfort that we currently enjoy in this country, and try not to take it for granted.
Public lands need to be managed for the overall good, not special interests, which I think requires a little compromise on both sides of the issue here.
Also, until all land ownership is nationalized in the United States of America, people still have the right to own and control private property in this country. Some of these rights are compromised by laws that provide tax breaks or are sold or leased out in the form of easements. If people refuse to minimize their impact, and respect landowner's wishes, don't be too surprised if more and more private land owners start exercising their rights.
It's also easy and self-serving to deny the truth. Having worked on the land and in the forests of the Upper Peninsula for the past 35 years, I have an intimate knowledge and understanding of the soils and landscapes of the region, including the area along the Ontonagon River in the vicinity of Military Hill. If you dig a 6 foot deep hole up there you will find evidence of rotational slumping and landslide including buried trees and forest debris. It is one of the most active and susceptible landscapes in the U.P., and the process of land movement has been going on long before people even existed up here and is ongoing. It is wise to try to protect this area as much as possible, because the danger of triggering or accelerating these natural processes is very real.
Please spare me the global warming jokes, but just because the climate of the earth is naturally changing and has been for a long time before man doesn't mean that we don't have a profound impact on our environment. Some great forests that have been clear cut have never grown back because the soils eroded and the microclimate changed. Areas that once had great agriculture are now deserts because the natural balance was irreversibly upset. The jokes aren't so funny if you find yourself without food or any way to get it. I know it's a hard opinion to believe, but I for one am appreciative and thankful for the security and comfort that we currently enjoy in this country, and try not to take it for granted.
Public lands need to be managed for the overall good, not special interests, which I think requires a little compromise on both sides of the issue here.
Also, until all land ownership is nationalized in the United States of America, people still have the right to own and control private property in this country. Some of these rights are compromised by laws that provide tax breaks or are sold or leased out in the form of easements. If people refuse to minimize their impact, and respect landowner's wishes, don't be too surprised if more and more private land owners start exercising their rights.