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Supports prohibition of mountain biking
in Long Canyon area
July 2015
July 4, 2015

To the Editor:

It's not that often the Forest Service makes the "right" moves before being dragged into court, but this prohibition of mountain bikes is laudable, even though it represents virtually the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the scale of the landscape that should be closed to motorized and mechanized abuse.

Some will shriek and complain about my use of the adjective "abuse," but the reality is the presence of mechanized and motorized vehicles (and yes, thats what mountain bikes are—vehicles) in any landscape
has a negative impact on biodiversity, ranging from water pollution, to vegetation destruction and invasion by weeds, wildlife harassment and displacement and alienation from habitat, and degradation of the quality of recreational experience for those that like to walk, hike, picnic, or horseback ride.

And I want to stress that this impact is not confined to a few bad apples, as the mountain biking industry likes to say in dismissing it's impact; it is all users with machines in ecosystems whether
their invasion is off trail or on trail. Because some biker declares himself / herself to be a non entity--"Hey, its not me! I didn't do that!"--does not negate the reality of their presence in an ecosystem.

So, good on the Forest Service for this start. Now let us, the public, and the regulatory agencies like the Forest Service, look at a much broader and comprehensive elimination of mechanically facilitated abuses of landscapes.

Brian L. Horejsi
Ecologist / Wildlife Scientist
Frequent user of public lands, except where I've been driven out by mechanized / motorized intrusion.
 
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