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Mount Assiniboine Park Management Plan Part of the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site November 2012 Cover Page Photo Credit: Christian Kimber (Park Ranger) This document replaces the direction provided in the Mount Assiniboine Provincial Park Master Plan (1989). Mount Assiniboine Park Management Plan Approved by: November 15, 2012 ______________________________ __________________ Tom Bell Date Regional Director, Kootenay Okanagan Region BC Parks November 15, 2012 ______________________________ __________________ Brian Bawtinheimer Date Executive Director, Parks Planning and Management Branch BC Parks Plan Highlights The management vision for Mount Assiniboine Park is that the park continues to be an international symbol of the pristine scenic grandeur of British Columbia’s wilderness and the recreational enjoyment it offers. Key elements of the management plan include strategies to: Implement a zoning plan that enhances the emphasis on Mount Assiniboine Park’s value both as a component of a UNESCO World Heritage Site (which protects significant examples of Canadian Rocky Mountain ecosystems) and as the location of an internationally recognized wilderness recreation feature associated with heritage structures from the earliest days of facility-based backcountry tourism in the Canadian Rockies. Approximately 86% of the park is zoned as Wilderness Recreation, 13% is zoned as Nature Recreation, less than 1% is zoned as Special Feature and less than 0.01% is zoned as Intensive Recreation. Develop an ecosystem management strategy that coordinates management of vegetation and wildlife in the park with that of adjacent protected areas under other agencies’ jurisdiction and with activities on adjacent provincial forest lands. This includes a proposal to prepare a vegetation management strategy to maintain or restore natural disturbance regimes (i.e., insects, disease and fire) wherever possible. -
Summits on the Air – ARM for Canada (Alberta – VE6) Summits on the Air
Summits on the Air – ARM for Canada (Alberta – VE6) Summits on the Air Canada (Alberta – VE6/VA6) Association Reference Manual (ARM) Document Reference S87.1 Issue number 2.2 Date of issue 1st August 2016 Participation start date 1st October 2012 Authorised Association Manager Walker McBryde VA6MCB Summits-on-the-Air an original concept by G3WGV and developed with G3CWI Notice “Summits on the Air” SOTA and the SOTA logo are trademarks of the Programme. This document is copyright of the Programme. All other trademarks and copyrights referenced herein are acknowledged Page 1 of 63 Document S87.1 v2.2 Summits on the Air – ARM for Canada (Alberta – VE6) 1 Change Control ............................................................................................................................. 4 2 Association Reference Data ..................................................................................................... 7 2.1 Programme derivation ..................................................................................................................... 8 2.2 General information .......................................................................................................................... 8 2.3 Rights of way and access issues ..................................................................................................... 9 2.4 Maps and navigation .......................................................................................................................... 9 2.5 Safety considerations .................................................................................................................. -
May-July 2008 No
MAY-JULY 2008 No. 0803 chepontuc — “Hard place to cross”, Iroquois reference to Glens Falls hepontuc ootnotes C T H E N E W S L E tt E R O F T H E G L E N S F ALLS- S ARAFT O G A C H A P T E R O F T H E A DIRO N DA C K M O U nt AI N C L U B Hikers alerted to muddy trails By Jim Schneider promote safety, hikers are advised to use Debar Mountain Wild Forest — trails only at lower elevations during the Azure Mountain New York State Department of spring mud season. Lower trails usually Giant Mountain Wilderness — Giant’s Environmental Conservation (DEC) urges are dry soon after snowmelt and are on less Washbowl and Roaring Brook Falls hikers of the Adirondack High Peaks to be erosive soils than the higher peaks. DEC is High Peaks Wilderness — Ampersand cautious during trips into the area and to asking hikers to avoid the following trails Mountain; Cascade; Big Slide; Brothers, postpone hiking on trails above 3,000 feet until muddy conditions have subsided: and Porter from Cascade; avoid all other until otherwise advised. High Peaks Wilderness Area — all trails approaches During warm and wet spring weather, above 3,000 feet—wet, muddy snow con- Hurricane Primitive Area — The many trails in higher and steeper por- ditions prevail, specifically at: Algonquin; Crows and Hurricane Mountain from tions of the Adirondacks can be become Colden; Feldspar; Gothics; Indian Pass; Route 9N hazardous to hikers. In the current muddy Lake Arnold Cross-Over; Marcy; Marcy McKenzie Mt. -
Erling Strom
MARIST Archives & Special Collections LOWELL THOMAS PAPERS Box 844 File 3 Marist Archives & Special Collections, 3399 North Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601; 845.575.3199 Copyright Notice: Individuals requesting reproductions expressly assume the responsibility for compliance with all pertinent provisions of the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. ss101 et seq. Patrons further agree to indemnify and hold harmless the Marist College Archives & Special Collections and its staff in connection with any disputes arising from the Copyright Act, over the reproduction of material at the request of patrons. For more information please visit the following website: http://www.loc.gov/copyright/title17/. (Lfi ~K-H· GETTS, Inc· .-w~-LD-OR-F·-A-Sli_OR_lll-.-n-~w-YO-Rt:;_(l_TY December e, l~Z& ! r. Lov.ell Thomas Rockefell r Center e . York, N. Y. My de~r owell Thomas: am delighted to release Erling Strom. ·m afraid I have no expl nations whatever to offer you or Mr . Strom in the m~tter, we have done our best and h~ve spent a great deal of time and money on 'rls representation, but, as 1 told him the other d~y, it is probrble that some one ~l[e can do much bv ter for hi~ and he .d, 1 "1 ays have our warmest wishes and every afsi struice we ::!D.D. pr0 ·ide. CLARK H: GETT , INC. CHG:e. ~ ~{J • STROMS AT MANSFIELD • STOWE, VERMONT Jan 6. 1941. - 'l'ha1lke for your l••~ letter. I will •ever know how you find time to write them. It was nice to get all the news fr~m Placie, ane fine that you and the Marquis got together a little better this time. -
Roster of the New York State Fire Tower Forest Fire Observers
Roster of the New York State Fire Tower Forest Fire Observers By Bill Starr State Director of the Forest Fire Lookout Association Forest Fire Observer – Pillsbury Mountain © Copyright 2009 Unpublished Work Roster of the New York State Fire Tower Forest Fire Observers Table of Content: Introduction…………………………………1 The Roster…………………………………...2 List of the NYS Fire Towers….....................56 February 2009 Fire Tower Inventory……..59 Fire Tower Location Map………………….60 Number of Fires Spotted Graph…………...60 Historical Notes on Certain Fire Towers….61 Roster of the NYS Forest Fire Observers from the payroll file of the Bureau of Forest Fire Control 1911 – 1972 © Copyright 2009 Unpublished Work by Bill Starr The following roster of the New York State Forest Fire Observers was compiled from the index card payroll file of the Bureau of Forest Fire Control from 1911 through 1972. Although at least half of the fire towers operated beyond 1972 payroll records for that period do not seem to exist and the likelihood that any of these records might be found are remote. For that reason this is an incomplete accounting of all the Observers, but it is the most comprehensive source available. Dates are provided for the Observers who staffed the fire towers in the Adirondack and Catskill regions beyond 1972 which were obtained from the books by Martin Podskoch; The Catskill Fire Towers; Their History and Lore and The Adirondack Fire Towers; Their History and Lore - Northern and Southern Districts. Yet these records too are incomplete as they are from the recollections of the people interviewed by Mr. Podskoch. -
September 2020
Forest Fire Lookout Association New York State Chapter September 2020 Fall is right around the corner, but fall fire season is upon us! Here in NYS the streams are exceptionally low, there is very little if any rain in the forecast and we have wind too. One fairly significant fire broke out this month near New Paltz: The Cragswood Fire occurred in an area with steep and rocky terrain and winds hampered efforts as well. News Article. We have seen overcast skies due to smoke from western fires, but truthfully they have resulted in some incredible sunrises and sunsets here. We are much more fortunate than the western United States where wildfires have been raging for weeks. Many have died, many homes and businesses have been lost and many continue to be on the front lines trying desperately to make some forward progress. NYS has sent some Forest Rangers to assist, but due to Covid-19 guidelines our numbers are lower than the normal response. https://www.governor.ny.gov/news/governor-cuomo-welcomes-team-new-york-wildland-firefighters- home-rocky-mountains For the first time ever, the National Weather Service actually issued a firenado alert: https://www.rawstory.com/2020/08/firenado-national-weather-service-issues-americas-first-ever- warning-for-a-fire-tornado/ The news reports are frightening to watch. Winds have moved these fires at great speeds, putting more people in grave danger than ever and hampering efforts to fight them. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/13/us/Wildfires-Oregon-California-Washington.html Additionally, our FFLA national news has included reports of several lookouts being lost to these fires. -
2015 4Q Nwoutings Final.Spub
4TH Quarter 2015 NORTH WOODS NEWS Outings Schedule October, November and December 2015 This is a FINAL Outings Schedule. Most trip descriptions include the letter designations A, B, or C. The guidelines used in classifying our trips are listed in the tables below. These are general guidelines only and may not fit every trip exactly. The trip leader makes the final decsion. HIKER’S EFFORT LEVEL ELEVATION MILES TIME (HOURS) RATING GAIN (FEET) A+ Very Strenuous 4,000+ 10+ 10+ A Strenuous 3,000 5-10 8-10 B+ Moderately Strenuous 2,000+ 5-10 6-8 B Moderate 1,000+ 5-10 5-7 C+ Fairly Easy 1,000+ 5-8 4-6 C Easy under 1,000 under 5 under 5 PADDLER’S MLES PORTAGES WATER CLASS RATING A 12+ long (1/2 mile +) II - whitewater B 6-12 short I - moving C under 6 none flat Check for schedule changes online on our North Woods Chapter Calendar at: www.brownbearsw.com/freecal/northwoods NORTH WOODS CHAPTER OUTINGS 4th Quarter 2015 October 1, Thursday October 18, Sunday at 5:00PM Hike - Cobble Ledge Potluck Supper and Chapter Meeting Leaders: Frank and Lethe Lescinsky at Presbyterian Church, Church Street, Saranac 518-523-0334 or [email protected] Lake This new trail was constructed in 2014 and offers a Program: A member of a winter sports US National spectacular view of the Ausable Valley and Team from the Olympic Training Center will talk Whiteface and Esther Mountains as a reward for a about his/her experiences. 1.1 mile walk with relatively little climbing. -
The Cariboo and Monashee Ranges of British Columbia: an Alpinist’S Guide
1 THE CARIBOO AND MONASHEE RANGES OF BRITISH COLUMBIA: AN ALPINIST’S GUIDE by EARLE R. WHIPPLE Even today, British Columbia is still a wilderness of mountains, valleys, glaciers, forest and plateau. The Columbia Mountains (Interior Ranges; which include the Cariboo and Monashee Ranges) lie within British Columbia, west of the Canadian Rockies and the southern Alberta-British Columbia border. This guide describes the access and mountaineering in these two ranges. Aside from parts of the Coast Range and the northern Rockies, the Cariboo and Monashee Ranges are the most isolated in B.C. However, if one listens to the helicopters from the lodges in these ranges, when camped there, one may question this. Large, active glaciers (now in retreat) with spectacular icefalls exist in the mountains of the western part of the Halvorson Group, the northern Wells Gray Group, the Premier Ranges, the Dominion Group and northern Scrip Range; there is climbing on rock, snow and ice, and routes for those climbers wishing easy, relaxing climbing in beautiful scenery. Good rock climbing on gneiss is in the southern Gold Range and Mt. Begbie in the north. There are also locales offering fine hiking on trails or alpine meadows (Halvorson Group, southern Wells Gray Group, southern Scrip Range, and the Shuswap Group), and backpacking traverses have been worked out through the Halvorson and Dominion Groups, the Scrip Range and the Gold Range. Beautiful lake districts exist in the northern Cariboos, and the Monashees. The area covered by this book starts northwest of the town of McBride, on Highway 16, southeast of Prince George, and extends south to near the border with the U.S.A., staying within the great bend of the Fraser River, and then west of Canoe Reach (lake; formerly Canoe River) and just west of the lower Columbia River south of its great bend. -
Cycling Routes of the Saint Lawrence River Valley and Northern Adirondacks
Cycling Routes of the Saint Lawrence River Valley and Northern Adirondacks by Tom Ortmeyer and John Barron Cycling Routes of the Saint Lawrence River Valley and Northern Adirondacks Tom Ortmeyer and John Barron [email protected] [email protected] - 2 - Copyright © 2015 by Tom Ortmeyer and John Barron. All rights reserved. Keywords: Bicycle touring, Saint Lawrence River, Adirondacks Mountains, New York, Ontario, Quebec - 3 - Table of Contents Chapter 1. Introduction .............................................................................................................. - 6 - Chapter 2. The Thousand Islands ............................................................................................ - 12 - TI 1. Cape Vincent to Alexandria Bay ................................................................................ - 14 - TI 2. Thousand Island Parkway ........................................................................................... - 17 - TI 3. Howe Island ................................................................................................................ - 20 - TI 4. Cape Vincent to Sacket’s Harbor ................................................................................ - 23 - TI 5. St. Lawrence River to Kring Point .............................................................................. - 26 - TI 6. St. Lawrence Golf Course-Jacques Cartier State Park ................................................ - 29 - TI 7. Black Lake Loop ......................................................................................................... -
Standing Tall-- New York's Fire Towers
DEC photo Standing Lookout CourtesyAssociation Fire of Forest NY FOR 100 YEARS, FIRE TOWERS HAVE STOOD GUARD OVER OUR FORESTS New York's frst fre towers were made of wood logs; most had an open platform on top. Mark Bowie ing BY MARTY PODSKOCH GazingT at the peaksALL ablaze with color from my vantage point atop the fire tower on Hadley Mountain, I concluded that the trek was well worth the effort. I was high above the tree line, and the 360° vista afforded me spectacular views of the Green Mountains of Vermont, the Berkshires in Massachusetts, and the Adirondack High Peaks. 7 Peering over the edge, I marvel when whatever valuables they could carry. Fire The worst fires occurred in 1903 and I think of how long this tower has stood wardens couldn’t keep up with the battle 1908, when hundreds of thousands of acres here. I think of all the people who have and called on every able-bodied man to of land were destroyed and many animals stood here before me, and can’t help help fight the fires. perished. Bushels of fish died in the streams wonder what it must have been like to be from intense heat and from the lye (created a fire tower observer—spending hours in from water mixing with ash) that leached THE WORST FIRES this tiny cab, on guard for the first hint into the water. Stands of valuable timber of smoke that might signal a fire. were destroyed, and in some areas the soil OCCURRED IN 1903 I’ve always been fascinated by fire was so badly scorched that no new vege- towers and their history. -
Charted Lakes List
LAKE LIST United States and Canada Bull Shoals, Marion (AR), HD Powell, Coconino (AZ), HD Gull, Mono Baxter (AR), Taney (MO), Garfield (UT), Kane (UT), San H. V. Eastman, Madera Ozark (MO) Juan (UT) Harry L. Englebright, Yuba, Chanute, Sharp Saguaro, Maricopa HD Nevada Chicot, Chicot HD Soldier Annex, Coconino Havasu, Mohave (AZ), La Paz HD UNITED STATES Coronado, Saline St. Clair, Pinal (AZ), San Bernardino (CA) Cortez, Garland Sunrise, Apache Hell Hole Reservoir, Placer Cox Creek, Grant Theodore Roosevelt, Gila HD Henshaw, San Diego HD ALABAMA Crown, Izard Topock Marsh, Mohave Hensley, Madera Dardanelle, Pope HD Upper Mary, Coconino Huntington, Fresno De Gray, Clark HD Icehouse Reservior, El Dorado Bankhead, Tuscaloosa HD Indian Creek Reservoir, Barbour County, Barbour De Queen, Sevier CALIFORNIA Alpine Big Creek, Mobile HD DeSoto, Garland Diamond, Izard Indian Valley Reservoir, Lake Catoma, Cullman Isabella, Kern HD Cedar Creek, Franklin Erling, Lafayette Almaden Reservoir, Santa Jackson Meadows Reservoir, Clay County, Clay Fayetteville, Washington Clara Sierra, Nevada Demopolis, Marengo HD Gillham, Howard Almanor, Plumas HD Jenkinson, El Dorado Gantt, Covington HD Greers Ferry, Cleburne HD Amador, Amador HD Greeson, Pike HD Jennings, San Diego Guntersville, Marshall HD Antelope, Plumas Hamilton, Garland HD Kaweah, Tulare HD H. Neely Henry, Calhoun, St. HD Arrowhead, Crow Wing HD Lake of the Pines, Nevada Clair, Etowah Hinkle, Scott Barrett, San Diego Lewiston, Trinity Holt Reservoir, Tuscaloosa HD Maumelle, Pulaski HD Bear Reservoir, -
Ecology & Wonder in the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site
Ecology & Wonder Ecology & Wonder in the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site Robert William Sandford Frontispiece: The © 2010 Robert W. Sandford Grand Sentinel The Grand Sentinel is a great Published by AU Press, Athabasca University stone tower located just below 1200, 10011 – 109 Street the summit of Sentinel Pass in Edmonton, AB T5J 3S8 Banff National Park. Were it located outside of the dense cluster of astounding natural Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication features contained within Canada’s mountain parks, it Sandford, Robert W. would be one of the wonders of Ecology & wonder in the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage the world. As it is, it is just one Site / Robert William Sandford. more landscape miracle that can be seen from the summit Includes bibliographical references and index. of the pass. Issued also in electronic format (978-1-897425-58-9). Photograph by R.W. Sandford. ISBN 978-1-897425-57-2 1. Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site (Alta. and B.C.)--Environmental conditions. 2. National parks and reserves--Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site (Alta. and B.C.)--Management. 3. Environmental protection--Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site (Alta. and B.C.). I. Title. II. Title: Ecology and wonder. QH106.2.R6S26 2010 333.7’209712332 C2010-900473-6 Cover and book design by Virginia Penny, Interpret Design, Inc. Printed and bound in Canada by Marquis Book Printing. This publication is licensed under a Creative Commons License, Attribution- Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 Canada, see www.creativecommons.org. The text may be reproduced for non-commercial purposes, provided that credit is given to the original author.