Phylogenetic Α-Diversity Output Statistics. Ta
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115°20'0"W 115°0'0"W 114°40'0"W 114°20'0"W PISTOL LAKE " CHINOOK MOUNTAIN ARTILLERY DOME SLIDEROCK RIDGE FALCONBERRY PEAK ROCK CREEK SHELDON PEAK Red Butte "Grouse Creek Peak WHITE GOAWTh iMte OVaUlleNyT MAoIuNntain LITTLE SOLDIER MOUNTAIN N FD " N FD 6 8 8 T d Parker Mountain 6 Greyhound Mountain r R a k i e " " 5 2 l e 0 1 0 r 0 0 il 1 C l i a 1 n r o Big Soldier Mountain a o e pi r n Morehead Mountain T Pinyon Peak L White MoSunletain g Deer Rd " T " HONEYMOON LAKE " " BIG SOLDIER MOUNTAIN SOLDIER CREEK GREYHOUND MOUNTAIN PINYON PEAK CASTO SHERMAN PEAK CHALLIS CREEK LAKES TWIN PEAKS PATS CREEK Lo FRANK CHURCH - RIVER OF NO RETURN WILDERNESS o n Sherman Peak C Mayfield Peak Corkscrew Mountain r " d e " " R ek ls R l d a Mosquito Flat Reservoir F r e Langer Peak rl g T g k a Ruffneck Peak " ac d D P R d " k R Blue Bunch Mo"untain d e M e k R ill C r e Bear Valley Mountain k e e htmile r " e ig C r E C en r C re d ave Estes Mountain e G ar B e k " R BLUE BUNCH MOUNTAIN d CAPE HORN LAKES LANGER PEAK KNAPP LAKES MOUNT JORDAN l Forest CUSTER ELEVENMILE CREEK BAYHORRSaEm sLhAorKn EMountaiBn AYHORSE Nat De Rd Keysto"ne Mountain velop Road 579 d R " Cabin Creek Peak Red Mountain rk Cape Horn MounCtaaipne Horn Lake #1 o Bay d " Bald Mountain F hors R " " e e Cr 2 d e eek 8 R " nk Rd 5 in Ya d a a nt o ou Lucky B R S A L M O N - C H A L L I S N Fo S p M y o 1 C d Bachelor Mountain R q l " u e 2 5 a e d v y 19 p R Bonanza Peak a B"ald Mountain e d e w Nf 045 D w R R N t " s H s H C d " e sf r e o Basin Butte r 0 t U ' o r e F a n e 0 l t 21 t -
Sawtooth Interpretive & Historical Association
Sawtooth Interpretive & Historical Association GREG WEBBER A SPECIAL THANK YOU TO ALL OUR 2020 SUPPORTERS! Sawtooth Interpretive & Historical Association is honored to receive funding and in-kind contributions from individuals, foundations, and businesses that support our mission. We extend our sincerest thanks to our past and present members, donors and volunteers. PROGRAM PATRON $5,000+ Sari and Gary O’Malley Anonymous Jack Baird Melissa and David Pinney Kay Davies Jennifer Osborne Susannah Avey Sherrill and Ervine Baird Lynn Rosellini and David Whitman Sandy and Rich Ostrogorsky Dolores Bernardo Marsha and Bob Beckwith Leidy and Sadler Samson SAWTOOTH BENEFACTOR Carol Cole and Jim Rineholt Marilyn Burdwell Linda and Bill Bein Patty and Jack See $1,000+ Jim and Adrienne Stark Erica Cole Emmy Blechmann Art Selin In memory of Eleanor Mae Dixon Erik Storlie Rebecca Converse Joan and Mike Boren Rozalys Smith Ann and Paul Hill Spencer and Evelyn Strand Peggy Dean Marjorie and Robert Boren Michelle and Chris Stephens Idaho Rocky Mountain Ranch Wendy and Jeff Turner Gayle Dixon Kathy and Kent Browning Wendy and Jack Stevens Harvey Dale and Debra LaMorte Dan and Zella Unger Ellen and Tom Glaccum Terry and Hans Carstensen Phyllis and Fred Stewart The Obletz Family John and Sue Van Der Wal Lin Gray Mr. and Mrs. Harry J Chavanne Erik Storlie Nancy and Bob Warmack Harlan Hague Wei and Jon Christianson Anne and Tom Stuart SUSTAINING MEMBERS Mike and Colleen Werner Idaho Candy Company Stacey and Terry Clark Deanne Thompson $250+ Debbie and Stewart Wilder Dick and Mary Lou Kinney Audra and Jeff Clegg Christy and Charlie Thompson Leslie Benz Wolcott Family & Danner Log Cabins Fullmer Latter III Kathy and Steve Cole Dick Waite Family Kent Browning Patricia Young Melanie Lynn in honor of Anne and Steve Cunningham Dr. -
Summits on the Air – ARM for the USA (W7A
Summits on the Air – ARM for the U.S.A (W7A - Arizona) Summits on the Air U.S.A. (W7A - Arizona) Association Reference Manual Document Reference S53.1 Issue number 5.0 Date of issue 31-October 2020 Participation start date 01-Aug 2010 Authorized Date: 31-October 2020 Association Manager Pete Scola, WA7JTM 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. Document S53.1 Page 1 of 15 Summits on the Air – ARM for the U.S.A (W7A - Arizona) TABLE OF CONTENTS CHANGE CONTROL....................................................................................................................................... 3 DISCLAIMER................................................................................................................................................. 4 1 ASSOCIATION REFERENCE DATA ........................................................................................................... 5 1.1 Program Derivation ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 6 1.2 General Information ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 6 1.3 Final Ascent -
Newsletter 2020
P R E S E R V I N G T H E P A S T . P R O T E C T I N G T H E F U T U R E . Sawtooth Interpretive & Historical Association A N N U A L N E W S L E T T E R 2 0 2 0 “I learn something every time I go into the mountains.” Michael Kennedy P R E S I D E N T ' S L E T T E R N O V E M B E R 2 0 2 0 Education, Preservation, and Interpretation are core values of the Sawtooth Interpretive & Historical Association. Our mission is ‘to protect and advance the natural and cultural history of Idaho’s Sawtooth-Salmon River Country through preservation and education.' 2020 has certainly been a year to move past. As we began planning for a robust season of operations, COVID-19 changed our course of action. Like for many, it was a challenging year. Thanks to the leadership of our Executive Director, Lin Gray, and our Kokanee spawning in Fishhook Creek by Jill Parker Lead Naturalist, Hannah Fake, along with our dedicated board members, we were able to strategically plan for operations this summer. Our leadership team took health and safety seriously and we emerged successfully with a modified approach to our typical programming. While income was down significantly in SIHA bookstores, we were able to welcome visitors to the Stanley Museum, Redfish Visitor Center & Gallery, spend more time engaging with the increased traffic at trailheads, and keep a sense of some normalcy with our Forum and Lecture Series. -
Boulder-‐White Clouds National Monument Dear Regional
September 26, 2013 RE: Boulder-White Clouds National Monument Dear Regional Forester Rasure and Forest Supervisor Nourse, Outdoor Alliance—a coalition of five national, member-based organizations including Access Fund, American Canoe Association, American Whitewater, International Mountain Bicycling Association, and Winter Wildlands Alliance—writes to express our support for a Boulder-White Clouds National Monument in Idaho. We represent the interests of the millions of Americans who hike, paddle, climb, mountain bike, ski and snowshoe on our nation’s public lands, waters and snowscapes. Inclusive of local Idaho clubs and chapters, collectively, we have members in all fifty states and a network of approximately 1,100 local clubs and advocacy groups across the nation, many of whom recreate and have a distinct interest in the permanent protection of this iconic landscape. As one of the largest unprotected tracts of Forest Service land in the Continental US, there is significant opportunity to preserve the landscape and the uniQue recreational experiences currently available in the Boulder-White Clouds region. While recreation is prized here and highlighted by the current Sawtooth National Recreation Area (SNRA), the area’s fate has been debated consistently in the four decades since Cecil Andrus rode a campaign against mining near Castle Peak into a governorship. In that time, the surrounding communities of Salmon, Stanley, Ketchum and Hailey have become reliant on outdoor recreation, a sector that supports 77,000 jobs, and brings $6.3 billion in consumer spending, and $461 million in state and local tax revenue to Idaho.1 A national monument designation will strengthen local economies through business growth, increased visitation, and longer stays. -
SAWTOOTH NATIONAL RECREATION AREA Wilderness
SAWTOOTH NATIONAL RECREATION AREA Recreation Report July 2, 2014 Wilderness 50th Events Trey McIntyre Photo Exhibit: Visit us for a breathtaking series of photographs of TMP dancers, interacting with the elements of nature in the Sawtooth Wilderness. Dates: June 13 through July 6, 2014, from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the Sawtooth NRA Visitor Center, 8 miles north of Ketchum on Highway 75. For more information, contact Carol Cole at [email protected] or 208-727-5007. To view online: http://treymcintyre.com/ image/portfolios/sawtooth-project/. Stay Tuned for more events coming in July and August! The Wilderness Act The Wilderness Act was signed by President Lyndon B. John- son in 1964. It created the legal definition of wilderness in the United States and protected several millions of acres of feder- al land. The Wilderness Act is well know for its poetic and clear definition of wilder- ness: “A wilderness, in contrast with those areas where man and his own works dominate the landscape, is hereby recognized as an area where the earth and its “It is a wholesome and neces- community of life are untrammeled (uncontrolled) by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain.” In its own words, the Wilderness Act sought to: sary thing for us to turn again “assure that an increasing population, accompanied by expanding settlement and growing mechanization, does not occupy and modify all areas within the U.S. and to the earth and in the contem- its possessions, leaving no lands designated for preservation and protection in plation of her beauties to their natural condition…” know of wonder and humility.” Keep Wilderness Wild and Clean: All summer, volunteers can help clean the Sawtooth Wilderness and join the Sawtooth Society for an end of season celebra- - Rachael Carson tion (date to be announced). -
1:100,000 1 Inch = 1.6 Miles Central Idaho-01
R 10 E R 11 E 115°7'30"W R 12 E 115°W R 13 E 114°52'30"W R 14 E 114°45'W R 15 E 114°37'30"W R 16 E 114°30'W R 17 E 114°22'30"W R 18 E S k i k e l v e Joe Jump Basin e Lookout Mountain k La e e r st e r r k C k e R C e h ee r C e e Little a Cr u Iron Cre k nce C l h r w Airport Rd e Car c C Central Idaho-01 e bo n an k B liv o t C nat e l e d e r u k i a r C e a g l C e F S r r e e e e S e C a M M C k e t s r a k o in a C a G o Creek s th rc in k i o m o e C Fire Suppression Constraints e S re C r k y e r k e e C m re e ek n m C e k i r r Alpine Peak o Ziegler Basin t Fish Critical Habitats T 10 N a C Observation Peak J e an s B g je T 10 N n d i Jimmy Smith Lake n v i ulch Bull Trout Critical Habitat a G r Hoodoo Lake L k rry k Creek ake Cree he G Big L Big Lake Creek 222 e Lake C Grandjean e Big Balsam Rd r k Trailer Lakes Regan, Mount C e Spawning Areas of Concern Little Redfish Lake e ry r S a C ek 222 F re Trail Creek Lakes d o o C n c rk l u r Resource Avoidance Area 36 P i 36 o a ra Big Lake Creek a Williams Peak B M ye T NF-214 Rd tte 31 31 36 31 31 36 31 Ri Cleveland Creek Safety Concerns ve 36 Wapiti Creek Rd r EAST FORK 36 S a l Suppression tactics Avoidance Area 01 Thompson Peak m o Railroad Ridge n Crater Lake 06 01 R Bluett Creek D Misc Resource Areas i ry 06 01 k v 01 01 06 06 Gu 01 06 k e e lc e re h e C r k r k k e Meadows, The C e oo re Watson Peak im Creek x Wilderness Area e hh C Iron Basin J o r Fis old Chinese Wall ek F C G re ti C Bluett Creek i Slate Creek r Retardant Avoidance Area p Gunsight Lake e a ld W ou B -
Monitoring White Cloud Milkvetch (Astragalus Vexilliflexus Var. Nubilus) on the Sawtooth National Recreation Area: Baseline Results, 2005
MONITORING WHITE CLOUD MILKVETCH (ASTRAGALUS VEXILLIFLEXUS VAR. NUBILUS) ON THE SAWTOOTH NATIONAL RECREATION AREA: BASELINE RESULTS, 2005 Idaho Conservation Data Center Idaho Department of Fish and Game PO Box 25 Boise, Idaho 83707 Michael Mancuso 2006 Sawtooth National Forest and Idaho Department of Fish and Game ABSTRACT White Cloud milkvetch (Astragalus vexilliflexus var. nubilus) is a U.S. Forest Service, Region 4 sensitive plant species known from ten occurrences, all located within the Sawtooth National Recreation Area. It is endemic to an approximately 21 km x 10 km area on the eastern slope of the White Cloud Peaks and western slope of the adjacent Boulder Mountains in Custer County, Idaho. In 2005, the Sawtooth National Forest contracted the Idaho Department of Fish and Game’s Idaho Conservation Data Center to establish a monitoring program for this species. White Cloud milkvetch census, plant community, and ground disturbance information was collected along permanently marked transects at eight of the ten known occurrences. Photo point photographs and the collection of additional occurrence area disturbance and threat information were also part of the monitoring protocol. Baseline results showed occurrences had variable White Cloud milkvetch density and habitat characterized by low vegetation cover. The majority had minimal or no disturbance. The landscape surrounding all occurrences was dominated by native vegetation and unfragmented except for occasional secondary roads. Bowery Ridge is the occurrence requiring the most immediate management attention. Recent off-trail motorcycle and heavy cattle use were observed within and near the occurrence. Imminent, serious threats were not observed within the other occurrences visited. Periodic monitoring is recommended to ensure managers are kept appraised of population and habitat trends, the status of any threats, and to evaluate whether directed management actions such as grazing allotment boundary adjustments, are having the intended effect. -
Fish Creek State Park Draft Management Plan
FISH CREEK STATE PARK Draft Management Plan DECEMBER 2013 Explore More. Montana State Parks Our Mission is... To preserve and protect our state’s heritage and the natural beauty of our public lands for the benefit of our families, communities, local economies and out-of-state visitors. Our Objectives are... To provide excellent land stewardship, public safety and service through recreation, innovation and education. Our Goals are... To provide an extraordinary experience for our visitors and to keep our state park system strong now and for generations to come. Prepared by Montana State Parks A Division of Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks 1420 6th East Avenue P.O. Box 200701 Helena, MT 59620-0701 (406) 444-3750 www.stateparks.mt.gov FISH CREEK STATE PARK DRAFT MANAGEMENT PLAN Fish Creek State Park Management Plan Approved Signatures Recommended by: ________________________________ ____________ Chas Van Genderen Date Administrator, Montana State Parks Approved by: ________________________________ ____________ Tom Towe Date Chairman, Montana State Parks & Recreation Board ________________________________ ____________ Jeff Hagener Date Director, Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks i FISH CREEK STATE PARK DRAFT MANAGEMENT PLAN Acknowledgements Montana State Parks would like to thank the following people for their thoughtful insight and contributions to the Fish Creek State Park Management Plan: Members of the public, neighboring landowners and interested organizations who took time to attend scoping meetings, review the plan and provide constructive -
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N " 111°20'0"W 111°0'0"W 0 ' " 0 Red Butte " Henderson Peak 4 Prospect Peak S ° E 500 Temple Peak " W 3 " Thunder Mountain 3 3 4 d 21 R " " 3 0 y 0 w S DRIGGS BATES 1 E 600 GARNS MOUNTAIN W 600 S H TEMPLE PEAK HAWLEY GULCH W S 625 S S Piney Peak Red Mountain " " W 675 S 700 S W W 700 S E W Liars Peak S 0 E 0 7 Squirrel Mountain 5 7 " 4 5 5 3 5 S " Chicken Peak 0 S Natl S W 800 S Fo Wheaton Mountain Victor re " st D W !( eve " lop R S oa W ta d W 900 S 20 W Hwy 31 te 6 1 H R 3 0 w d Rocky Peak 0 0 S y W 95 y 2 3 w W 3 " W S H 1000 S 0 S 0 0 W Hwy 31 0 33 1 RQ Moose S Rd VICTOR FOURTH OF JULY PEAK STOUTS MOUNTAIN WHEATON MOUNTAIN HEISE SE d Stouts Mountain R k Rd " e lat e e F r Antelop C e Na n tl i Fo P re Fourth of July Peak P st Deve Oliver Peak in lop R e oa " C d " S r 2 w ee T A R G H E E N F 5 a k 0 n B V en R a ch d lle Rd y H w y Ross Peak d R Thompson Peak " k e re " C d ney R i a Atkinson Peak r R e 31 " b RQ h g u a r Swan Valley T !( n Palisades Peak L Little Palisades Peak o d " r R Creek u Rainey PA" LISADES PEAK b N n THOMBPalSdyO MNo uPnEtaAinK Upper Palisades Lake e SWAN VALLEY " l I r CONANT VALLEY o w POINT LOOKOUT t Little Baldy Mountain i S n " R G d d R 7 7 N 0 ¤£26 d a o I R S Windy Peak w p a lo n " Sheep Mountain e V " v a e ll M t D ey es H Ln or w rk F y Pa l O at N " d Sheep Creek Peak R Elkhorn Peak k Y e re " C p e e W h S Red Peak Rd N " ek " re ar C Needle Peak 0 e ek ' B re Elk C " 0 Big 2 ° 3 4 MOUNT BAIRD PALISADES DAM RED RIDGE COMMISSARY RIDGE CASTLE ROCK U S H Paul Peak w " y 2 6 d k R ree C A R I -
Sawtooth National Recreation Area and Jerry Peak Wilderness Addition Hemingway-Boulders, Jim Mcclure-Jerry Peak and White Clouds Wilderness Areas
FOREST SERVICE AND BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT Sawtooth National Recreation Area and Jerry Peak Wilderness Addition Hemingway-Boulders, Jim McClure-Jerry Peak and White Clouds Wilderness Areas Interim Maps and Guidelines 2016 “A wilderness, in contrast with those areas where man and his own works dominate the landscape, is hereby recognized as an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled (wild and free from human control or manipulation) by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain. An area of wilderness is further defined to mean … an area of undeveloped Federal land retaining its primeval character and influence, without permanent improvements or human habitation, which is protected and managed so as to preserve its natural conditions…” —The Wilderness Act, 1964 U.S. President Barack Obama signed into law Congressman Mike Simpson’s legislation creating three new Wilderness areas in Idaho. The legislation, The Sawtooth National Recreation Area and Jerry Peak Wilderness Additions Act (P.L. 114-46), was signed August 7, 2015, in a signing ceremony at the White House. The Sawtooth National Recreation Area and Jerry Peak Wilderness Additions Act designates three areas as part of the National Wilderness Preservation System, including the Jim McClure-Jerry Peak Wilderness (116,898 acres), White Clouds Wilderness (90,769 acres) and Hemingway-Boulders Wilderness (67,998 acres). These protected areas preserve 275,665 acres of high mountain backcountry with crystal lakes and abundant wildlife. The U.S. Forest Service manages federal lands within the newly designated wilderness areas with the exception of more than 24,000 acres of the Jim McClure-Jerry Peak Wilderness, and 450 acres of the White Clouds Wilderness which is managed by the Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM). -
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114°40'0"W 114°20'0"W 114°0'0"W 113°40'0"W n Sherman Peak L Corkscrew Mountain TWIN PEAKS y " re " d F u FRANK CHURCH - RIVER OF NO RETURN WILDERNESS R PATS CREEK CHALLIS h GROUSE PEAK MAY EAST OF MAY PATTERSON CHALLIS CREEK LAKES c d Mosquito Flat Reservoir l u R Mill Creek Rd G k Challis n e o !( t e a r e C P d L R a d s e R d g s h s n u R i k i r o m e k r p e e e d G r S e r R M C e o i ll r Blue Mountain n k g r C i L o N d V n U i y F e " S Meadow Peak a f d R o e r H Table Mountain l e T a w l C r G y " e k c n a 9 " y i 3 R a l M Y 1 d 7 CUSTER ELEVENMILE CREEK 2 BAYHORSE LAKE BAYHORSE BRADBURY FLAT Unnamed Lake MEADOW PEAK MAHOGANY HILL DONKEY HILLS NW "Keystone Mountain Ramshorn Mountain LITTLE ANTELOPE FLAT n n " L L D y h o o c d u t C a R b B k c ay e l H h d e e o r M rs s e C R C d r p eek Lime R R d r d l n i O o n y g an C R Bachelor Mountain Rd Cat d d t Dea Bald Mountain la " S F Grouse Creek Mountain q l d u " ia " R a N n f 045 R ente s w d C s a C Lone Pine Peak P N r e g " " e in 0 k r ' p R 0 s e 2 d N l ° f b 3 u 4 7 2 R o 4 d D SUNBEAM THOMPSON CREEK CLAYTON BALD MOUNTAIN LONE PINE PEAK ANTELOPE FLAT GROUSE CREEK MOUNTAIN DOUBLESPRING SPRING HILL Saturday Mountain n R d yo " n a C re r ep C ek R a She d Sp ¤£93 Na Sta tl F te H 5 ore wy 7 st De d ve R l op Dickey Peak 6 R 1 o 1 ad Potaman Peak " d 1 a 17 " o Tr Sullivan Lake R l p o l Anderson Peak e v " e D t LIVINGSTON CREEK POTAMAN PEAK ZIEGLER BASIN THE PAINT POT s BORAH PEAK BURNT CREEK HORSE BASIN DICKEY PEAK e r o U F S l R t Jimmy Smith Lake o H a a