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Owl Mountain Wilderness Evaluation
May-June 2009 Owl Mountain Wilderness Evaluation WILDERNESS EVALUATION Owl Mountain – 621016 11,083 acres OVERVIEW History The 2006 inventory identified this area as meeting the criteria for a potential wilderness area (PWA) as described in Forest Service Handbook (FSH) 1909.12, Chapter 70. The area had not been identified in any previous inventory. The following chart depicts the current 1988 Colville National Forest Land and Resource Management Plan direction for the 2006 inventoried area. Table 1--Management area percentages (rounded) Colville National Forest MA1 MA10 MA5 MA6 MA7 MA8 Old Growth Semi- Scenic Scenic/ Wood/ Winter Dependant primitive, Timber Winter Forage Range Species Motorized range Habitat Recreation 32% 37% 9% 12% 6% 3% Location and Access The Owl Mountain Proposed Wilderness Area (PWA) is contained wholly within Ferry County in T. 40 N., R. 35 E., Sec. 1, 12 13, 23, 24, and 25; and T. 40 N, R. 36 E., Sec. 3 – 10, 15 – 22, 27 – 31, and 34. The area is accessed on the east side through the Little Boulder/Independent Creek road systems, ultimately Forest Road 9576-370, which ends at a road closure on Huckleberry Ridge. There is no access from the north because of the Canadian border. The northeast side of the area is extremely rugged and steep and provides no access. Access from the southeast side is along U.S. Highway 395. However, very few people actually access the area from this side. The terrain on the lower slope is such that few hike up from the highway. Most of the access to this area is derived from driving into the heart of the Kerry Creek watershed on Forest Road 9576-150, which leads to the east end of Forest Trail 102 (Owl Mountain Motorized Trail). -
Woga Members 10-16-18.Xlsx
Land Based Outfitter CAMP WAHOO! - SUTTON, Mike & Stacy Member type Land Based Outfitter Phone: Web http://www.highcountry-outfitters.com Fax: Mailing 11320 Lambert Rd. Cle ellum WA 98922 Email: [email protected] Description A full service outfitter & kid's camp offering horse riding, pack trips, drop camps and more. Our rustic tent cabin camp is our summer home and base for our unique summer kid's camp. Campers get their own horse to care for and ride daily as they learn authentic mule packing techneiques. Region(s):6 Cascade Wilderness Outfitters - Steve Darwood Member type Land Based Outfitter Phone: 509-997-0155 Web http://www.CascadeWildernessOutfitters.com Fax: Mailing P.O. Box 103 Carlton, WA 98814 Email: Description Family & group oriented deluxe & standard summer pack trips, ride or hike. Dutch oven dinners. Hunting Drop Camps: Early Hunts: Andrews Creek - Spanish Camp - Cathedral Lakes - Remmel Lake - Apex Pass. General Hunts: Twisp River - Wolf Creek Areas Goat Hunts: by permit only in Methow 2 -2 Unit. Operating in the Pasayten Wilderness, Lake Chelan-Sawtooth Wilderness on Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest Region(s):3 Chinook Pass Outfitters & Guides, Inc. - Wilson, Paul Member type Land Based Outfitter Phone: 509-653-2633 Web http://www.chinookpass.com Fax: Mailing P.O. Box 1030 Naches, WA 98937 Email: [email protected] Description Horseback riding! Venture into the Wiliam O. Douglas or Norse Peak Wilderness-both bordering the Mt. Rainier National Park. Choose from hour rides to extended vacations. Fish the high lakes. Hunt deer, elk, bear, and goat with rifle, bow, muzzeloader or camera. Wenatchee National Forest (GMU #346-352-356). -
The Wild Cascades
THE WILD CASCADES Fall, 1984 2 The Wild Cascades PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE ONCE THE LINES ARE DRAWN, THE BATTLE IS NOT OVER The North Cascades Conservation Council has developed a reputation for consistent, hard-hitting, responsible action to protect wildland resources in the Washington Cascades. It is perhaps best known for leading the fight to preserve and protect the North Cascades in the North Cascades National Park, the Pasayten and Glacier Peak Wilderness Areas, and the Ross Lake and Lake Chelan National Recreation Areas. Despite the recent passage of the Washington Wilderness Act, many areas which deserve and require wilderness designation remain unprotected. One of the goals of the N3C must be to assure protection for these areas. In this issue of the Wild Cascades we have analyzed the Washington Wilderness Act to see what we won and what still hangs in the balance (page ). The N3C will continue to fight to establish new wilderness areas, but there is also a new challenge. Our expertise is increasingly being sought by government agencies to assist in developing appropriate management plans and to support them against attempts to undermine such plans. The invitation to participate more fully in management activities will require considerable effort, but it represents a challenge and an opportunity that cannot be ignored. If we are to meet this challenge we will need members who are either knowledgable or willing to learn about an issue and to guide the Board in its actions. The Spring issue of the Wild Cascades carried a center section with two requests: 1) volunteers to assist and guide the organization on various issues; and 2) payment of dues. -
Northeast Chapter Volunteer Hours Report for Year 2013-2014
BACK COUNTRY HORSEMEN OF WASHINGTON - Northeast Chapter Volunteer Hours Report for Year 2013-2014 Work Hours Other Hours Travel Equines Volunteer Name Project Agency District Basic Skilled LNT Admin Travel Vehicle Quant Days Description of work/ trail/trail head names Date Code Code Hours Hours Educ. Pub. Meet Time Miles Stock Used AGENCY & DISTRICT CODES Agency Code Agency Name District Codes for Agency A Cont'd A U.S.F.S. District Code District Name B State DNR OKNF Okanogan National Forest C State Parks and Highways Pasayten Wilderness D National Parks Lake Chelan-Sawtooth Wilderness E Education and LNT WNF Wenatchee National Forest F Dept. of Fish and Wildlife (State) Alpine Lakes Wilderness G Other Henry M Jackson Wilderness M Bureau of Land Management William O Douglas Wilderness T Private or Timber OLNF Olympic National Forest W County Mt Skokomish Wilderness Wonder Mt Wilderness District Codes for U.S.F.S. Agency Code A Colonel Bob Wilderness The Brothers Wilderness District Code District Name Buckhorn Wilderness CNF Colville National Forest UMNF Umatilla National Forest Salmo-Priest Wilderness Wenaha Tucannon Wilderness GPNF Gifford Pinchot National Forest IDNF Idaho Priest National Forest Goat Rocks Wilderness ORNF Oregon Forest Mt Adams Wilderness Indian Heaven Wilderness Trapper Wilderness District Codes for DNR Agency B Tatoosh Wilderness MBS Mt Baker Snoqualmie National Forest SPS South Puget Sound Region Glacier Peak Wilderness PCR Pacific Cascade Region Bolder River Wilderness OLR Olympic Region Clear Water Wilderness NWR Northwest Region Norse Peak Mt Baker Wilderness NER Northeast Region William O Douglas Wilderness SER Southeast Region Glacier View Wilderness Boulder River Wilderness VOLUNTEER HOURS GUIDELINES Volunteer Name 1. -
Pacific Northwest Wilderness
pacific northwest wilderness for the greatest good * Throughout this guide we use the term Wilderness with a capital W to signify lands that have been designated by Congress as part of the National Wilderness Preservation System whether we name them specifically or not, as opposed to land that has a wild quality but is not designated or managed as Wilderness. Table of Contents Outfitter/Guides Are Wilderness Partners .................................................3 The Promise of Wilderness ............................................................................4 Wilderness in our Backyard: Pacific Northwest Wilderness ...................7 Wilderness Provides .......................................................................................8 The Wilderness Experience — What’s Different? ......................................9 Wilderness Character ...................................................................................11 Keeping it Wild — Wilderness Management ...........................................13 Fish and Wildlife in Wilderness .................................................................15 Fire and Wilderness ......................................................................................17 Invasive Species and Wilderness ................................................................18 Climate Change and Wilderness ................................................................19 Resources ........................................................................................................21 -
Jackknife – 621018 8,956 Acres
May-June 2009 Jacknife Wilderness Evaluation WILDERNESS EVALUATION Jackknife – 621018 8,956 acres OVERVIEW History The 2006 inventory identified this area as meeting the criteria for a potential wilderness area (PWA) as described in Forest Service Handbook (FSH) 1909.12, Chapter 70. The area had not been identified in any previous inventory. The following chart depicts the current 1988 Colville National Forest Land and Resource Management Plan direction for the 2006 potential wilderness area. Table 1--Management area percentages (rounded) Colville National Forest MA1 MA10 MA3A MA5 MA6 MA7 MA8 Old Growth Semi- Recreation Scenic Scenic/ Wood/ Winter Dependant primitive, Timber Winter Forage Range Species Motorized range Habitat Recreation 8% 15% 1% 16% 3% 54% 2% Location and Access The Jackknife Potential Wilderness Area (PWA) is entirely within Ferry County approximately 12 miles northwest of Kettle Falls. It is generally located on the north side of Alligator Ridge, along the south and east of the south fork of Boulder Creek. The PWA then encompasses both sides of Thompson Ridge on the east side of the area. The Jackknife PWA is accessed either from the Deadman Creek road system via Forest Road 9565-800 on the west side; forest road 9565-080 on the southeast side (Davis Lake Road); on the east by Forest Road 9500-705, and on the north by Forest Road 6110. Forest Trail 107 (motorized trail), which runs along the top of Thompson Ridge, bisects the east side of the area. Geography and Topography The Jackknife PWA is in the north central portion of the Kettle Range and lies east of the hydrologic divide between the Columbia River and the Curlew and Sanpoil Valleys. -
Conservation Status Assessment
Element Ranking Form Oregon Biodiversity Information Center Conservation Status Assessment Scientific Name: Galerina atkinsoniana Classification: Fungus Assessment area: Washington Heritage Rank: S4 Rank Date: 3/9/2017 Rank Reasons: Relatively common species with at least 50 occurrences in Washington, around a third in protected areas. Range Extent: F = 20,000-200,000 sq km (~8,000-80,000 sq mi) Comments: Around 54,000 sq. km range. Found across the west side of Washington. Population Size: Not assessed Comments: None Number of Occurrences: C = 21 - 80 Comments: At least 50 know occurrences from Washington, probably more. Area of Occupancy: E = 26-125 4-km2 grid cells Comments: At least 50 occupied grid cells in Washington. Good Viability: D = Some (13-40) occurrences with excellent or good viability or ecological integrity Comments: At least 16 occurrences are in protected areas. Found in Mount Rainier National Park, Buckhorn Wilderness, Alpine Lakes Wilderness, Mount Baker Wilderness, Pasayten Wilderness, Glacier Peak Wilderness, Henry M. Jackson Wilderness. Environmental Sensitivity: Not Evaluated Comments: None Short Term Trends: Not Evaluated Comments: None Long Term Trends: Not Evaluated Comments: None Threat Impact: D = Low Comments: Page 1 of 2 NatureServe Element Rank Calculator version 3.185 Element Ranking Form Oregon Biodiversity Information Center Around a third of the Washington occurrences are in protected areas. Risk to the species is believed to be low. From Norvell 2002 assessment: "GAAT2 is found in boreal forests with full canopy (to preserve moisture) and sufficient moss and needle litter. It has been reported from riparian areas or highly moist LSOG forests with little to no disturbance (Roger 1998), but in Oregon it has also been collected from protected sites in recently thinned and clear cut stands (Norvell & Exeter 2003). -
Wilderness Trip Planner
National Park Service North Cascades National Park Service Complex U.S. Department of the Interior Stephen Mather Wilderness An Enduring Legacy of Wilderness “[I]t is hereby declared to be the policy of the Congress to secure for the American people of present and future generations the benefits of an enduring resource of wilderness.” — Wilderness Act, 1964 The North Cascades National Park Complex includes 684,000 acres in three units: North Cascades National Park, Lake Chelan National Recre- ation Area, and Ross Lake National Recreation Area. Congress has designated 94% of the Complex as the Stephen Mather Wilderness. Today, as in the past, wilderness is an important part of every American’s story. People seek out wilderness for a variety of reasons: physical or mental challenge; solitude, renewal, or a respite from modern life; or as a place to find inspiration and to explore our heritage. What draws you to visit wilderness? The Stephen Mather Wilderness is at the heart of over two million acres of some of the wildest lands remaining, a place “where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man….” Untrammeled (meaning“free of restraint,” “unconfined”) captures the essence of wilderness: a place where the natural processes of the land prevail, and the developments of modern technological society are substantially unnoticeable. Here, we are visitors, but we also come home—to our natural heritage. It is a place to experience our past, and a place to find future respite. This is the enduring legacy of wilderness. To Hope, B.C. -
Wilderness Areas Along the Pacific Crest Trail
Vancouver C A N A B D R I T I A S H C O Wilderness Areas L U M B MT BAKER- 1 I A OKANO G SNOQ 2 AN- UALMIE along the WE N ATCHEE NATIONAL 3 LO YMPIC NATIONAL NATIONAL FOREST Pacific Crest Trail FOREST Seattle 4 FOREST 5 50 years of Wilderness on the PCT W A S H I N On Sept. 3, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Wilderness Act into law, recognizing 7 6 G T O placesN “where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself 8 GIFFORD PINCH is a visitor who does not remain.” O NATIONALT 9 FOREST Countless people have passed and will continue to pass through America’s most treasured land- 10 scapes, including the 48 wilderness areas that include the Pacific Crest Trail. 11 Portland The Wilderness Act established the National Wilderness Preservation System and set aside an 12 initial 9.1 million acres of wild lands for the use and benefit of the American people. Over the past MT HOOD 13 50 years, Congress has added more than 100 million acres to this unique land preservation system. NATIONAL FOREST To learn more about the country’s wilderness areas, visit www.wilderness.net. SIUSL A W NATIONAL FOREST O 1 Pasayten Wilderness – Oct. 2, 1968 R 14 E G 15 O N 2 Stephen Mather Wilderness – Nov. 16, 1988 (Wash. Park Wilderness Act of 1988) WILLAMETTE 16 NATIONAL DESCHUTES 3 Glacier Peak Wilderness – Sept. 3, 1964 (Wilderness Act) FOREST NATIONAL 4 Henry M. -
State Trust Lands
15 125° 99 97 Rossland How do public 124° 17 123° 122° 121° 120° 119° Grand 118° 22A 117° S 22 49° T 13 Abbotsford Forks CANADA 49° R Tsawwassen Boundary lands contribute to A B R I T I S H C O L U M B I A Midway Osoyoos Salmo- USA I Big T Bay Blaine 543 BOUNDARY Gypsy CANADA Danville Laurier Boundary DAM Sumas CHARLES AND MARY EDER Ferry Peak Washington’s O Sheep Abercrombie Point 547 WILDLIFE AREA Creek Galiano Island F LOOMIS Osoyoos Mountain N Roberts 546 Ross Cathedral (7309) Mount River USA Togo (7308) G Lynden Peak Lake T40N Redoubt Lake NRCA CHESAW Creek River Mountain quality of life? E MOUNT BAKER - SNOQUALMIE (8601) Birch Everson (8956) ROSS LAKE WILDLIFE AREA (6148) Priest O Nooksack Oroville OKANOGAN- Northport R Bay NATIONAL FOREST T40N Deep G Nooksack Metaline Creek Creek Kettle 9 Pasayten Falls When people hear ‘public I 548 544 Palmer Kettle A North Fork 539 Lake Curlew Creek Wilderness lands,’ they think of parks and N O R T H NATIONAL Pasayten Wilderness Sullivan Myers COLVILLE 39 Mayne LAKE TERRELL River North Metaline WILDLIFE AREA 21 2016 Is TENNANT LAKE AND Mount Fork S Upper recreation, and may not realize all the Ferndale Creek Sullivan NOOKSACK Mount 39 31 Priest Deming Mount Lago Lake NATIONAL Lake Saltspring WILDLIFE AREAS N Shuksan Fury (8745) River EA Lake LUMMI INDIAN R I benets that public lands provide. Patos Toroda 25 North Middle WHATCOM (9127) (8300) A Island RESERVATION NOOKSACK Loomis COLVILLE BOX Is Creek LOOMIS Saturna 542 Pender TRIBE FOREST A Jack WENATCHEE Creek CANYON AMTRAK Mount Baker Wilderness Is Island RECREATION Mountain DAM Lake E T Most public lands in Washington 38 r Lummi Mount e Mount River (9066) STATE G Sucia Whatcom d N Bonaparte l N Island N Moresby Fork Baker u O River Ione Is River South o I State are above 3,000 feet. -
2020 Hunting Prospects: District 16
2020 SCOTT FITKIN, District Wildlife Biologist JEFF HEINLEN, Assistant District Wildlife Biologist DISTRICT 6 HUNTING PROSPECTS Okanogan County TABLE OF CONTENTS FIRE AND ROAD CONDITIONS UPDATE ............................................................................................................... 1 DISTRICT 6 GENERAL OVERVIEW ........................................................................................................................ 1 ELK ............................................................................................................................................................................... 3 General Information, Management Goals, and Population Status ........................................................................ 3 Which GMU Should Elk Hunters Hunt? .............................................................................................................. 4 DEER ............................................................................................................................................................................. 4 General Information, Management Goals, and Population Status ........................................................................ 4 Which GMU Should Deer Hunters Hunt? ............................................................................................................ 5 What to Expect During the 2020 Season .............................................................................................................. 7 How to Find and Hunt -
The 1984 Wilderness
WashingtonWild FALL NEWSLETTER 2014 Including: The 1984 Wilderness Act: A Wilderness Campaign for the Ages Raising Washington’s Next Generation of Wilderness Advocates The Wilderness Act: Still Balancing Enjoyment and Protection 50 Years Later 1 Washington Wild Dear Friends, Staff As we near the convergence of several milestone anniversaries, Jim Hook the Wilderness Act of 1964, the Washington Wilderness Act of 1984 and, of course our own 35th anniversary as the premium Executive Director state-wide grassroots Wilderness advocacy organization in the state of Washington, we look back with some satisfaction at Lyndsay Gordon the conservation gains made within this span of time. We are Outreach Coodinator proud to recall significant events from our own past. Tom Uniack In its history, Washington Wild has played in invaluable role in permanently protecting over Conservation Director three million acres of Wilderness. Much of this effort occurred in the 1980’s with the passage of the 1984 Washington Wilderness Act which resulted in the designation of just over one million acres throughout the state and the 1988 Washington Parks Wilderness Act which designated Jill Wasberg 1.7 million acres of new Wilderness in Rainier, Olympic and North Cascades National Parks. Development & After nearly a decade of garnering local support, the 2008 Wild Sky Wilderness Act became the Three Fools Trail, Pasayten Wilderness by Andy Porter Photography Communications first new national forest Wilderness area in Washington State in a quarter century and protected Director 106,000 acres of mature and old growth forests and salmon spawning streams within 90 minutes of downtown Seattle. Today we have before Congress active public campaigns in Alpine Lakes The 1984 Washington Wilderness Act: and the Wild Olympics, which will designate nearly 150,000 acres of new Wilderness and 500 miles of Wild & Scenic Rivers.