โMay-10-2014 09:48 PM
โMay-15-2014 05:50 AM
nayther wrote:
bobx2,
you have no idea what I've seen or what I do for OHV access, I asked not to be flamed, ie not get personal and you did just that. as I stated this is my experience in the desert, OHV parks and National Forests in and around CA. I won't bother to go into my activeness in this arena beyond that but those that know me know I speak the truth and am constantly working with BLM, NFS, etc. on access issues.
I cannot speak for Colorado either.
This thread is degrading into personal attacks so I'm done. I'll just leave it at that.
โMay-14-2014 10:56 PM
โMay-14-2014 05:49 PM
nayther wrote:
This thread is degrading into personal attacks so I'm done. I'll just leave it at that.
โMay-14-2014 03:56 PM
โMay-14-2014 03:48 PM
Mmaxed wrote:bobx2 wrote:nayther wrote:
A prime example of everyone working together is the Sequoia National Forest. Stewards of the Sequoia.
They have an awesome trail system and some wilderness areas too. Trails are multiple use with hikers, equestrian, mountain bikes and motorcycles. Very few ATV trails though as that makes the trails too wide.
Makes the trails too wide for what??? Is a single track less noticeable than a double track?
"nayther wrote:
BRAVO TO YOU BOTH! I keep harping on education but can only reach those that are organized or follow boards such as this, many do not. I'm not picking on ATV's or UTV's but unfortunately they are, by percentage, the less "educated" in land use issues. Anyone can jump on an ATV or drive a UTV but it takes some skill to ride a motorcycle and we see a greater percentage of motorcyclists are educated than the others."
More skill and better educated if you ride a two wheeler?? Hahahahahaha. You are priceless. Make a statement like that, and then beg to not be flamed for it. That is about the most uneducated post in this thread, and the same mentality that makes bikers think that they don't tear up trails. Have you EVER seen a bike that wasn't throwing up a roost behind it? Clueless...
Nayther is right according to what we see here. The single track trails don't get shortcut, trashed and messed up like the ATV trails. Responsible ATVers have tried to get a club going, but the slobs don't join any way. May be true for bikers also but the trail conditions tell otherwise. Rode some ATV trails last year that you couldn't tell where the trail was supposed to be. It would split, then in a few hundred yards split again. Only places there was just one trail was where that was the only passage. Almost never see trash on single track. Sometimes we nearly run out of room to carry back all we see on ATV trails.
โMay-14-2014 02:53 PM
bobx2 wrote:nayther wrote:
A prime example of everyone working together is the Sequoia National Forest. Stewards of the Sequoia.
They have an awesome trail system and some wilderness areas too. Trails are multiple use with hikers, equestrian, mountain bikes and motorcycles. Very few ATV trails though as that makes the trails too wide.
Makes the trails too wide for what??? Is a single track less noticeable than a double track?
"nayther wrote:
BRAVO TO YOU BOTH! I keep harping on education but can only reach those that are organized or follow boards such as this, many do not. I'm not picking on ATV's or UTV's but unfortunately they are, by percentage, the less "educated" in land use issues. Anyone can jump on an ATV or drive a UTV but it takes some skill to ride a motorcycle and we see a greater percentage of motorcyclists are educated than the others."
More skill and better educated if you ride a two wheeler?? Hahahahahaha. You are priceless. Make a statement like that, and then beg to not be flamed for it. That is about the most uneducated post in this thread, and the same mentality that makes bikers think that they don't tear up trails. Have you EVER seen a bike that wasn't throwing up a roost behind it? Clueless...
โMay-14-2014 01:57 PM
mustangglp wrote:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqL2qZ3YsMg
Its kind of dumb to blame the tool when it really the people to blame?
Here is a good example of your typical RV er
โMay-14-2014 01:45 PM
โMay-14-2014 11:05 AM
nayther wrote:
A prime example of everyone working together is the Sequoia National Forest. Stewards of the Sequoia.
They have an awesome trail system and some wilderness areas too. Trails are multiple use with hikers, equestrian, mountain bikes and motorcycles. Very few ATV trails though as that makes the trails too wide.
โMay-14-2014 07:57 AM
โMay-14-2014 07:49 AM
The Texan wrote:nayther wrote:Please come out to our area and "educate" the motorcyclist on trail etiquette and responsible riding. They are by far the worst offenders in this neck of the woods and anyone here will vouch for that. Anytime the county takes USFS or BLM to court over illegal closures, the prime example used in all court cases by BOTH federal agencies are the motorcyclist. Yes, every group needs to be "properly" educated, but please don't set there and point fingers, paint everyone else as the bad guy and then pat your group on the back as the good guy that does NO damage.
BRAVO TO YOU BOTH! I keep harping on education but can only reach those that are organized or follow boards such as this, many do not. I'm not picking on ATV's or UTV's but unfortunately they are, by percentage, the less "educated" in land use issues. Anyone can jump on an ATV or drive a UTV but it takes some skill to ride a motorcycle and we see a greater percentage of motorcyclists are educated than the others. We really need to educate everyone on the damage they are doing to our sport by illegal access.
And please don't flame me, I like ATVs and UTVs just my personal preference is two wheels. I know most on this board that have more than two wheels in the dirt are responsible users.
โMay-13-2014 05:56 PM
Bakersfield wrote:
"Access for each individual group with designated trails, equally distributed, is a fair, unselfish, solution."
That is the quote of the day. All groups need to come together with one voice and pressure the politicians to keep public lands open and accessible.
garry owen wrote:
i can remember as young lad going to the forest and seeing signs saying;" national forest, land of many uses". i can't remember when i last saw one.
โMay-13-2014 05:25 PM
โMay-13-2014 05:15 PM
โMay-13-2014 04:03 PM
nayther wrote:Please come out to our area and "educate" the motorcyclist on trail etiquette and responsible riding. They are by far the worst offenders in this neck of the woods and anyone here will vouch for that. Anytime the county takes USFS or BLM to court over illegal closures, the prime example used in all court cases by BOTH federal agencies are the motorcyclist. Yes, every group needs to be "properly" educated, but please don't set there and point fingers, paint everyone else as the bad guy and then pat your group on the back as the good guy that does NO damage.
BRAVO TO YOU BOTH! I keep harping on education but can only reach those that are organized or follow boards such as this, many do not. I'm not picking on ATV's or UTV's but unfortunately they are, by percentage, the less "educated" in land use issues. Anyone can jump on an ATV or drive a UTV but it takes some skill to ride a motorcycle and we see a greater percentage of motorcyclists are educated than the others. We really need to educate everyone on the damage they are doing to our sport by illegal access.
And please don't flame me, I like ATVs and UTVs just my personal preference is two wheels. I know most on this board that have more than two wheels in the dirt are responsible users.
Bob & Betsy - USN Aviation Ret'd '78 & LEO Ret'd '03 & "Oath Keeper Forever"