S
snowduner
Member
SAWS members,
For your reading enjoyment. Maybe you would like to buy a copy of this book for your coffee table; I THINK NOT.
I was not pleased to read this author's diatribe and major lies and distortions, but I still felt it was important to show you once again how far the extreme green will go to ensure that snowmobiling will be eliminated from OUR public lands.
Of course there are always going to be a few bad apples in every form of recreation that make the majority of that form of recreation look bad, and I am positive they have several pictures of some motorized bad apples in this book, but give me a break. This book is way off the deep end and does not apply to the majority of motorized recreationists, and especially not snowmobilers.
Dave
Snowmobile Alliance of Western States
http://www.chelseagreen.com/2007/items/thrillcraft
Thrillcraft
The Environmental Consequences of Motorized Recreation
George Wuerthner
Our collective natural heritage is at risk. Thirst for motorized recreation in America is creating lasting environmental impact upon our remaining wild lands. With over 100 stirring color photographs and powerful essays from policy experts, scientists, and environmental activists, Thrillcraft bears witness to the senseless destruction that is risking access to the beauty, silence, and splendor of our country’s natural world for future generations.
Thrillcraft exposes the lasting damage done to our land, water, and air from the growing plague of jet skis, quads, dirt bikes, dune buggies, snowmobiles, and other motorized recreational craft that are penetrating the last bastions of wild America. In stark detail the book describes how offroad vehicle use is responsible for wildlife habitat fragmentation, disturbance of sensitive wildlife, soil erosion, spread of invasive weeds, loss of silence, as well as water and air pollution.
This important and beautiful tome will be a treasured addition to any environmentalist’s or conservationist’s library.
Introduction
This book is about thrillcraft and the scope of their social and environmental impacts on public lands. As employed here, the term thrillcraft refers to motorized vehicles used for recreational purposes. These machines are typically driven off highways and streets and are also knownas off-highway vehicles (OHVs) or off-road vehicles (ORVs). The most common thrillcraft are jet skis, all-terrain vehicles (ATVs), airboats, swamp buggies, dune buggies, dirt bikes, some four-wheel-drive trucks, and sport utility vehicles (SUVs). For the purpose of this book, snowmobiles are also included in this category.
Some thrillcraft have common practical applications—a farmer might use an ATV to move cows from one pasture to another; a ski resort might use a snowmobile to move an injured skier off a slope. However, the majority of these machines sold today are used primarily for recreation where speed or the ability to encroach upon and overcome difficult terrain is the chief goal.
The use of these machines for such purposes often results in environmental degradation, including soil erosion; water, noise, and air pollution; destruction of vegetation; fragmentation of wildlife habitat; loss of wilderness values; and other associated impacts upon land and people. The increasing use of these machines on public lands is now a national concern. Indeed, former chief of the Forest Service, Dale Bosworth, recently listed ORVs as one of four major threats to public lands today.
Public lands—including national parks, seashores, recreation areas, and forests, as well as wilderness areas, Bureau of Land Management (BLM) lands, Bureau of Reclamation lands, Army Corp of Engineer lands, and state parks, to name but a few—are the heart of the “commons,” a timehonored idea that certain lands must be available to all citizens rather than privately held. In a sense, everyone owns the commons or, from a slightly different perspective, nobody does. In either case, they are to be shared responsibly by everyone so that everyone may enjoy and benefit from them. The integrity of these commons is compromised when the special values associated with them—wildlife habitat, soils, vegetation, and nonphysical qualities such as quietude—are despoiled, harmed, or injured. Other “commons,” such as air and water, are protected by laws and regulations that limit the rights of citizens or companies to degrade them.
Negative effects on other people attempting to enjoy the commons are also a major impact of thrillcraft: the noise, the speed, the boorish behavior usually associated with these machines is almost universally disruptive. One study in Montana concluded that 89 percent of hikers and 84 percent of horseback riders found that the presence of motorcycles was incompatible with their activities and impaired their experiences. In another study of snowmobilers and cross-country skiers in Alberta, Canada, researchers found that skiers were greatly impacted by the presence of snowmobiles while the opposite was not the case. Similar one-way conflicts were documented in a study at Cape Hatteras National Seashore in North Carolina where nonmotorized users were impacted by ORVs, while motorized users were not affected by the presence of the nonmotorized public. These findings are particularly disturbing because thrillcraft users make up a small minority—estimated to be no more than 5 to 7 percent—of all public lands users. In a study of trail users on the Gallatin National Forest near Yellowstone National Park, only 3 percent of the respondents to a survey were engaged in motorized recreation, while 96 percent were engaged in nonmotorized activities. Because of this great imbalance, there is growing public support for limiting or banning ORVs. Out of 7,600 comments on the travel plan for the Lewis and Clark National Forest in Montana, 98 percent of the respondents opposed ORV use on the Rocky Mountain Front.
Despite these impacts on the public, most government agencies have done little to regulate these machines. According to the Natural Trails and Water Coalition, the majority of public lands are currently open to unrestricted ORV use, including 93 percent of the 264 million acres under BLM administration, outside of Alaska. Public lands agencies such as the Forest Service have never done a thorough environmental analysis of the long-term effects of ORV use on public lands, nor is the federal government striving for a consistent national policy. As of 2006, some 30 percent of all national forests have a policy that restricts off-road travel in particular areas, and posts “closed” signs. Another 30 percent have the opposite policy where certain areas are posted open to such use. Many forests have no definitive policy at all, and only a few, including the Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia and the White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire, currently prohibit ORV use (though snowmobiles are permitted on designated trails in the White Mountain National Forest). The majority of national forests merely condone the existing use and, in limited ways, attempt to control its worse abuses. A similar lack of clear direction exists for most BLM lands. Fortunately, many national parks are offlimits to ORVs, except in Alaska, where ORVs are regularly allowed to tear up the fragile tundra and disrupt vegetation that covers permafrost.
For your reading enjoyment. Maybe you would like to buy a copy of this book for your coffee table; I THINK NOT.
I was not pleased to read this author's diatribe and major lies and distortions, but I still felt it was important to show you once again how far the extreme green will go to ensure that snowmobiling will be eliminated from OUR public lands.
Of course there are always going to be a few bad apples in every form of recreation that make the majority of that form of recreation look bad, and I am positive they have several pictures of some motorized bad apples in this book, but give me a break. This book is way off the deep end and does not apply to the majority of motorized recreationists, and especially not snowmobilers.
Dave
Snowmobile Alliance of Western States
http://www.chelseagreen.com/2007/items/thrillcraft
Thrillcraft
The Environmental Consequences of Motorized Recreation
George Wuerthner
Our collective natural heritage is at risk. Thirst for motorized recreation in America is creating lasting environmental impact upon our remaining wild lands. With over 100 stirring color photographs and powerful essays from policy experts, scientists, and environmental activists, Thrillcraft bears witness to the senseless destruction that is risking access to the beauty, silence, and splendor of our country’s natural world for future generations.
Thrillcraft exposes the lasting damage done to our land, water, and air from the growing plague of jet skis, quads, dirt bikes, dune buggies, snowmobiles, and other motorized recreational craft that are penetrating the last bastions of wild America. In stark detail the book describes how offroad vehicle use is responsible for wildlife habitat fragmentation, disturbance of sensitive wildlife, soil erosion, spread of invasive weeds, loss of silence, as well as water and air pollution.
This important and beautiful tome will be a treasured addition to any environmentalist’s or conservationist’s library.
Introduction
This book is about thrillcraft and the scope of their social and environmental impacts on public lands. As employed here, the term thrillcraft refers to motorized vehicles used for recreational purposes. These machines are typically driven off highways and streets and are also knownas off-highway vehicles (OHVs) or off-road vehicles (ORVs). The most common thrillcraft are jet skis, all-terrain vehicles (ATVs), airboats, swamp buggies, dune buggies, dirt bikes, some four-wheel-drive trucks, and sport utility vehicles (SUVs). For the purpose of this book, snowmobiles are also included in this category.
Some thrillcraft have common practical applications—a farmer might use an ATV to move cows from one pasture to another; a ski resort might use a snowmobile to move an injured skier off a slope. However, the majority of these machines sold today are used primarily for recreation where speed or the ability to encroach upon and overcome difficult terrain is the chief goal.
The use of these machines for such purposes often results in environmental degradation, including soil erosion; water, noise, and air pollution; destruction of vegetation; fragmentation of wildlife habitat; loss of wilderness values; and other associated impacts upon land and people. The increasing use of these machines on public lands is now a national concern. Indeed, former chief of the Forest Service, Dale Bosworth, recently listed ORVs as one of four major threats to public lands today.
Public lands—including national parks, seashores, recreation areas, and forests, as well as wilderness areas, Bureau of Land Management (BLM) lands, Bureau of Reclamation lands, Army Corp of Engineer lands, and state parks, to name but a few—are the heart of the “commons,” a timehonored idea that certain lands must be available to all citizens rather than privately held. In a sense, everyone owns the commons or, from a slightly different perspective, nobody does. In either case, they are to be shared responsibly by everyone so that everyone may enjoy and benefit from them. The integrity of these commons is compromised when the special values associated with them—wildlife habitat, soils, vegetation, and nonphysical qualities such as quietude—are despoiled, harmed, or injured. Other “commons,” such as air and water, are protected by laws and regulations that limit the rights of citizens or companies to degrade them.
Negative effects on other people attempting to enjoy the commons are also a major impact of thrillcraft: the noise, the speed, the boorish behavior usually associated with these machines is almost universally disruptive. One study in Montana concluded that 89 percent of hikers and 84 percent of horseback riders found that the presence of motorcycles was incompatible with their activities and impaired their experiences. In another study of snowmobilers and cross-country skiers in Alberta, Canada, researchers found that skiers were greatly impacted by the presence of snowmobiles while the opposite was not the case. Similar one-way conflicts were documented in a study at Cape Hatteras National Seashore in North Carolina where nonmotorized users were impacted by ORVs, while motorized users were not affected by the presence of the nonmotorized public. These findings are particularly disturbing because thrillcraft users make up a small minority—estimated to be no more than 5 to 7 percent—of all public lands users. In a study of trail users on the Gallatin National Forest near Yellowstone National Park, only 3 percent of the respondents to a survey were engaged in motorized recreation, while 96 percent were engaged in nonmotorized activities. Because of this great imbalance, there is growing public support for limiting or banning ORVs. Out of 7,600 comments on the travel plan for the Lewis and Clark National Forest in Montana, 98 percent of the respondents opposed ORV use on the Rocky Mountain Front.
Despite these impacts on the public, most government agencies have done little to regulate these machines. According to the Natural Trails and Water Coalition, the majority of public lands are currently open to unrestricted ORV use, including 93 percent of the 264 million acres under BLM administration, outside of Alaska. Public lands agencies such as the Forest Service have never done a thorough environmental analysis of the long-term effects of ORV use on public lands, nor is the federal government striving for a consistent national policy. As of 2006, some 30 percent of all national forests have a policy that restricts off-road travel in particular areas, and posts “closed” signs. Another 30 percent have the opposite policy where certain areas are posted open to such use. Many forests have no definitive policy at all, and only a few, including the Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia and the White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire, currently prohibit ORV use (though snowmobiles are permitted on designated trails in the White Mountain National Forest). The majority of national forests merely condone the existing use and, in limited ways, attempt to control its worse abuses. A similar lack of clear direction exists for most BLM lands. Fortunately, many national parks are offlimits to ORVs, except in Alaska, where ORVs are regularly allowed to tear up the fragile tundra and disrupt vegetation that covers permafrost.