Archives for: February 2012
Cape Hatteras gets ready to enforce ORV rules
February 28th, 2012The National Park Service has installed posts on the beach at Cape Hatteras National Seashore to designate ORV routes and vehicle-free areas as the park gets ready to enforce new off-road-vehicle regulations.
New signs with information about the ORV regulations adopted February 15 have also been installed at ORV ramps, a news release says. The rules, which require drivers to display an ORV special use permit when driving on designated routes, are to be enforced beginning March 15.
A 2008 consent decree requires the National Park Service to limit driving on the beach at Hatteras to times that do not conflict with nesting and spawning seasons for endangered species. The agreement, which settles a lawsuit brought by various environmental groups, also closes pedestrian access to specific areas of the seashore for bird breeding season from mid-March to mid- to late-August and for turtle nesting until early November.
Weekly closure notices are available each Thursday in season at www.nps.gov/caha/parknews/newsreleases.htm.
ORV permits cost $120 for the calendar year or $50 for a permit good for seven days after it is issued. They are available at Coquina Beach, the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse Visitor Center (Buxton), and the Ocracoke Visitor Center.
Violation of the new ORV rules may bring a $150 fine.
A new web page has FAQs, route maps and other information.
Uwharrie National Forest area opens after fire
February 17th, 2012The U.S. Forest Service said the Birkhead Mountains Wilderness Area has been re-opened to visitors today after a fire there was 100 percent contained.
Authorities said in a news release issued Wednesday that the fire in the northern reaches of the Uwharrie National Forest "was likely caused by an abandoned campfire at a remote campsite."
Firefighters held the fire, which was first reported around 7 p.m. on February 11, to 73 acres.
Our friend Smokey Bear provides these tips for safely extinguishing a campfire:
* Allow the wood to burn completely to ash, if possible.
* Pour lots of water on the fire; drown ALL embers, not just the red ones.
* Pour until hissing sound stops.
* Stir the campfire ashes and embers with a shovel.
* Scrape the sticks and logs to remove any embers.
* Stir and make sure everything is wet and they are cold to the touch.
* If you do not have water, use dirt. Mix enough dirt or sand with the embers. Continue adding and stirring until all material is cool. Do NOT bury the fire as the fire will continue to smolder and could catch roots on fire that will eventually get to the surface and start a wildfire.
Study recommends closing state parks in winter
February 15th, 2012A study by a General Assembly committee suggests that the state could save more than $2 million annually by closing state parks during the winter and closing other state-supported attractions all together.
The study by the Program Evaluation Division (.pdf) for the North Carolina General Assembly was received by a legislative oversight committee and sent to a subcommittee for further examination, WRAL reported Tuesday.
The legislature ordered the study last year to determine whether the state could save money by consolidating administration "and to suggest optimal operating schedules for sites," a cover letter with the study says.
The review included sites administered by the Department of Cultural Resources (23 state historic sites, nine museums, and three commissions) and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (39 state parks and recreation areas, three aquariums, Jennette's Pier, the North Carolina Zoological Park, the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, and the North Carolina Museum of Forestry).
The study calls for DENR to record daily visitation at all of its parks and recreation areas, and to use this data to determine the impact of closing December through February. “The Program Evaluation Division estimated the state could save $2.4 million by closing all state parks and recreation areas for three months during the winter season, but the division determined it was premature to recommend that level of closure without daily visitation data,” it says.
The study’s other recommendations include:
• Adopting a five-day schedule for seven historic sites and closing two: the Museum of the Albemarle in Elizabeth City and the CSS Neuse/Richard Caswell Memorial in Kinston. On a cost-per-visitor basis, they are among the system’s most expensive to operate.
• Privatizing the N.C. Zoo and aquariums, and developing or expanding private-public partnerships or private sponsorships for other sites.
• Consolidating management of sites in close proximity to each other, such as Singletary Lake State Park and the undeveloped Bay Tree Lake State Park in Bladen County, and at Bennett Place, Duke Homestead, and Historic Stagville in Durham County.
• Increasing admission fees or eliminating fee discounts (such as for senior citizens) at the zoo and aquariums.
In letters attached to the report, officials from DENR and Cultural Resources dispute some of the study's findings, downplay projected savings and reject the study’s recommendations.
Lewis Ledford, director of the state Division of Parks and Recreation, told WRAL that most state parks aren't designed to keep people out, and trying to close them for the winter could pose safety and security risks for people and the facilities.
Officials with both agencies point out that in some rural areas, the state sites are the only recreational attractions available to residents.
Pisgah Forest trails may close for utility work
February 14th, 2012Because of utility work near Brevard, parts of several trails in the Pisgah National Forest may be closed at times between now and the end of March, the U.S. Forest Service said Monday.
Trails affected are in the Pisgah Ranger District, and include:
- Black Mountain Trail, which starts behind the Pisgah District Ranger Station/Visitor Center on U.S. 276.
- Art Loeb Trail between Davidson River Campground and the junction with the Estatoe Trail.
- Buckhorn Gap Trail.
- Avery Creek Trail (and Avery Creek Road).
Progress Energy will be taking down trees along U.S. 276 during the work week as part routine maintenance of the utility right of way, the Forest Service says. Trees won't be felled on Saturdays or Sundays.
Jordan Lake prescribed burn scheduled
February 13th, 2012As prescribed burns continue to be scheduled on North Carolina recreation lands, the State Parks said today a burn will be conducted later this month at Jordan Lake State Recreation Area.
The controlled fire is to cover a 155-acre area near the public entrance to the RV campsites and shoreline at the Vista Point Access.
"Some plant communities and animal species rely on periodic fire for their existence," a state parks news release says. "The prescribed burn will also reduce the amount of potential wildfire fuel. The prescribed burn will help protect the park’s resources and neighboring landowners if lightning, arson or carelessness spark a wildfire."
The fire will be set when weather conditions make it safe. Monitor the state parks website page for Jordan Lake (through the link above) or our Twitter feed, @NCOutdoorsGuide, for notice of the burn.
Vista Point, one of five campgrounds at Jordan Lake, has 50 group camping sites for RVs and five group camping sites for tents. Vista Point is off of U.S. 64 and North Pea Ridge Road north of Pittsboro.
Cape Lookout lighthouse opens for more climbers
February 7th, 2012Cape Lookout National Seashore is providing additional opportunities to climb the lighthouse this summer.
A news release today says the Seashore will add a day - Wednesday - and an extra time to climb at the end of the day for the 2012 season.
The lighthouse will be open from 10 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, May 16 to September 22, this year.
Climbs begin every 15 minutes and require reservations. Tickets cost $8, or $4 for ages 12 and younger (must be at least 44 inches tall) and 62 and older, and for those holding a National Parks and Federal Recreation Lands Access Pass.
Pisgah restoration project gets $605,000 grant
February 3rd, 2012A U.S. Forest Service program will provide $605,000 to reduce wildfire costs and severity, and to fight hemlock wooly adelgid in two popular recreation areas of the Pisgah National Forest, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said in a news release today.
The grant is among $40 million to be allocated for 20 forest and watershed restoration projects under the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration program.
The 10-year project is meant to restore natural fire-adapted vegetation in the forest, lower wildfire severity and fire suppression costs, and help threatened and endangered species in and around Linville Gorge and the Wilson Creek Wild and Scenic River corridor.
The proposal for the grant calls for prescribed burns, thinning mature trees and planting shortleaf pine in 36,795 acres of pine and oak forests. Other work includes "removing white pine, red maple, yellow poplar and other mesophytic species from oak-hickory and yellow pine Ecological Zones" to "improve species composition and structure on 1,850 acres of upland forests." Another 2,740 acres will be treated for non-native invasive plants.
The Grandfather Restoration Project (it's named for the ranger district) will also include treatment of 540 acres of eastern and Carolina hemlock for hemlock woolly adelgid within the first two years of the project and then indefinitely thereafter.
Additional plans call for bank stabilization, species reintroduction, and removal of artificial fish barriers and non-native invasive plants on a total of 16 miles of streams in the project area.
The proposal says the work involved, including harvesting and selling wood products, will create 12.6 full-time-equivalent jobs.
Upper Chattooga River boating ban upheld
February 1st, 2012The U.S. Forest Service announced its decision Tuesday to not allow boating on a disputed stretch of the Upper Chattooga River, a national wild and scenic river.
"Current management, or not boating, will be maintained year-round between Lick Log Creek and (Georgia) Hwy. 28, an area that includes the popular Delayed Harvest, a highly valued trout fishery," the three forest supervisors in South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia have decided. (The northern reaches of the river are in the Nantahala National Forest in Jackson and Macon counties, North Carolina.)
To maintain the ban on boating in the northern section of the river has been the Forest Service's stated preference throughout the decision-making process, so the final ruling comes as no surprise.
"The agency’s decisions have been seven years in the making," the Forest Service news release says, "during which time many individuals and organizations haven’t always seen eye-to-eye on how to manage the upper segment of the Chattooga WSR."
The restricted area is approximately 20 miles of the river's total of 57 miles. For five of the 20 miles, the river passes through the 8,274-acre Ellicott Rock Wilderness, which is protected under the Wilderness Act.
The Forest Service will continue to allow boating in the winter and early spring between Green Creek in North Carolina and Lick Log Creek in South Carolina.
"Other actions include maintaining the current prohibition on commercial boating and boating in the tributaries on the upper segment; preventing large woody debris removal without agency approval; and redesigning, relocating or closing some trails and campsites and maintaining sustainable ones," the release says. "In addition, the agency will continue to monitor visitor use and its impacts."
The 496-page decision and it supporting and background documents are available here.
