Monday, March 26, 2012

So there is this bunch of crap going on the Elphinstone face. It seems that small group (size is a relative thing) is trying to protect the face with a park proposal. This group's effort is to preserve the park from logging but does so at the expense of others that use the area for other types of recreational experiences. The modern logging practices maintains the access to the face and therefore allows all persons to do what they want to do in the area. Mountain biking, building trails, ATV'ing, Horseback riding and paint balling. Typically when parks are granted access becomes limited because there isn't enough money to maintain such a large infrastructure. The present parks presents there own set of problems where trail maintenance, race use and trail upgrades takes 4 months for approval. People here don't recreate like that and therefore will go somewhere else. Don't think that this group hasn't thought about this and the scary part is that they have and made the decision to go ahead with the proposal. Granted logging could be better and planned better, but a park is not the answer.  There is a letter in the paper that explains it better.


March 14, 2012
The Editor – Coast Reporter
RE: ELF THREATENS MOUNTAIN BIKING BY CALLING FOR A PARK
Editor;
I am a Professional Forester and actively practice integrated resource management in my daily work.  I am also a mountain biker, trail runner, and mushroom picker and use the Roberts Creek Forest for my personal enjoyment.  My mountain bike friends build, maintain and ride the many trails on the Sunshine Coast - an area second to none for mountain bike riding with a promising economy built around it.  
When mountain biking was a fledgling sport, riders opened up old logging and shake cutter roads and built trails.  Now bikes are shuttled to trailheads and Provincial racing events are held on the maintained logging road system.  Like it or not, our mountain bike recreational experience is directly tied to having a road system maintained by continued harvesting in the Roberts Creek Forest.   
The BC Park system is highly regulated as are Regional Parks, albeit to a lesser degree.  Park infrastructure is expensive to maintain and as demonstrated by many other parks on the Sunshine Coast, trails and roads are often closed citing liability, high cost to operate, safety concerns and typically with Park mandates - an overall mandate for natural ecosystems.  
If Elphinstone Logging Focus (ELF) gets their way with their 1500 ha park concept, most recreational activities done in the Roberts Creek Forest will be banned.  When was the last time new mountain bike trails, jumps or bridges were built in a Provincial Park?  Mountain biking, horseback riding, ATV use and gathering botanical products is generally prohibited in Parks - but not in the Provincial Forest.
We should advocate for a more comprehensive planning process that integrates important values like recreation use with sustainable logging and responsible forest stewardship, particularly in the interface areas like the Roberts Creek Forest.  If this area becomes a Park, would you actually recreate there?
Warren Hansen
Langdale