Monday, September 28, 2009
ShowMe Hiking has moved!
Thanks!
Chuck
Wednesday, October 01, 2008
Mark Twain National Forest - Southwest Project
Lesser Known Trails
1600 Capen Park Drive
Length: 0.5 mile
Type: Dirt
Selling point: The park is home to limestone cliffs that draw rock climbers and sightseers alike.
User comment: “I come here every day because I can let my dog off the leash. I like that it’s in the woods,” MU student Shana Pauley said.
Hinkson Creek Trail
2011 S. Old 63
Length: 4.25 miles
Type: Limestone
Selling Point: The trail crosses the Hinkson Creek in several places, where you can find rust-colored bridges designed to look like the old railroad bridges along the Missouri River.
User comment: “I come here every day because it’s the only place you can bring your dog and not get a ticket,” Columbia College student Randi Robinson said. “There are places to bike, places to run and lots of trees.”
4500 Bethel St.
Length: 0.46 mile
Type: Limestone
Selling Point: The trail circles the Cosmo-Bethel Lake, which offers fishing and wildlife-viewing.
User Comment: “I love how you see the families fishing. I think that’s really neat,” said Katie Brown as she chased her 16-month-old son, Abner, away from a flock of geese.
Excerpt from: Thursday, June 5, 2008 Missourian, Lesser-known trails, by Ashley Simpson.
GPS trails on Google Earth
Google's announcement can be found here.
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Ozark Highland Trail article in October 2008 National Geographic
Sponsored backpacking trip on the Ozark Trail
The Gateway Council of Hostelling International USA is sponsoring a backpacking trip on the Ozark Trail. The dates are Saturday, Oct. 11 to Saturday, Oct. 18 (half week trips are available). They will backpacking 30 miles on the Current River section and 20 miles on the Between the Rivers section. This is their 20th year of promoting the Ozark Trail through our backpacking adventure. More information can be found here.
Friday, August 29, 2008
Wilderness groups to hold conference focusing on forest protection
ST. LOUIS — Wilderness advocates will gather next week in Salem to plan the next steps of an effort to win federal protection for 50,000 acres of public land in Missouri's Mark Twain National Forest.
The Missouri Wilderness conference on Sept. 6 is aimed at starting to build public awareness and support of the proposal before approaching potential sponsors in Missouri's congressional delegation.
"We feel confident they will want to do this good deed for Missouri," said John Karel of the Missouri Wilderness Coalition, an assortment of conservation groups working for the designation.
Currently, 4 percent of the Mark Twain forest is designated wilderness, meaning it is free of roads, all-terrain vehicles, mining and logging, but open to hiking, camping, fishing, horseback riding, hunting, canoeing and picnicking.
The additional acres would bring the amount of land in the state with that kind of protection to 7 percent. Missouri's last wilderness designation was 24 years ago. The first was in 1976.
While 50,000 acres sounds like a lot, it's "an incredibly modest proposal," organizer Scott Merritt said. The entire forest is 1.5 million acres.
"They're a rare resource worth protecting," Merritt said.
The coalition's proposal is for seven wild places that advocates say are vulnerable - Big Spring, Lower Rock Creek, North Fork, Smith Creek, Spring Creek, Swan Creek and Van East Mountain.
Karel said the areas were identified by conservation groups years ago, and, until recently, had special protection as "sensitive areas" under a settlement agreement with the U.S. Forest Service.
But the 2005 Forest Service plan dropped the sensitive area status, prompting conservationists to seek federal wilderness protection.
Karel said the wilderness areas are very popular with the public and heavily used.
The biggest hurdle may be winning over the Republican congresswoman for southeast Missouri where five of the proposed wilderness areas are located.
Rep. Jo Ann Emerson said she strongly opposes the proposal and believes it would hurt her constituents.
The group wants to meet with Emerson to discuss the proposal.
Mark Twain Deputy Forest Supervisor Paul Strong said the Forest Service did not recommend the areas for wilderness, but instead designated them as "semi-primitive, non-motorized."
He said the "semi-primitive" designation would allow the agency to do limited burning and logging to permit the growth of plants that would naturally grow in the environment.
Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., said he would look at the proposal and consider the views of all stakeholders.
"I cannot support any proposal that does not have the clear support of local citizens and all affected members of the delegation," he said.
"Also, many have expressed concern with the impact this plan would have on good forestry management."
In 1976, Missouri's first wilderness legislation was passed, designating Hercules Glades in Taney County and the Mingo Swamp in Wayne County.
Between 1976 and 1984, about 100,000 acres, most of them in the southern Ozarks, were declared wilderness areas. Almost 64,000 acres of Missouri's wilderness areas are already in the Mark Twain National Forest.
Besides Hercules and Mingo, the state's other existing wilderness areas include Bell Mountain, Rockpile Mountain, Devil's Backbone, Paddy Creek and Irish Wilderness.
Strong said that because wilderness requires a hands-off management approach, Hercules Glades are at risk of being overrun by Eastern red cedar trees.
"That's the trade-off," he said.
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
Routinely filling reservoir three inches from top
Sunday, April 30, 2006
Taum Sauk trail update from John Roth
I spoke with DNR this weekend about the status of the Taum Sauk trail, which is currently closed through Johnson Shut-Ins.
The long-range plan is to build a new through-hike bypass from the scour area at the base of Proffit Mountain, up the next ridge and through a scenic and rugged area overlooking the Shut-Ins, then down to the Black River to reconnect with the existing trail north of the lower reservoir. This portion of the trail will be scoped out in the coming weeks/months, and (cross your fingers) built with the OTAs help in the fall. This will be a neat section of trail.
The short-term plan is still uncertain. There was hope to obtain an easement through private land on the old Boy Scout trail to take the trail off Proffit down to Highway N and terminate at a new parking lot just north of the entrance to JSI. Easements are land contracts and problematic, and it just isn't going to happen quickly, so this option isn't viable by May 27th, which was DNR's original target date.
Another option is to rebuild the damaged trail through the scour or just above the scour, then connecting to either a new trailhead at Highway N or to an interpretive trail in the remodeled JSI park. Since the park is going through major renovations, and some of the designs are still fluid, it will require more time to finalize this route.
The positive news is that the rebuilding of the damaged trail is still a priority with DNR. But it's going to take some more time. I'll update the ozarktrail.com website and this group with information as it becomes available.
In other news, MDC had a controlled burn on Proffit three weeks ago, and the trail there is really tough to find. Work is ongoing to reestablish this route. You should avoid this area until it's cleared and new markers are hung.
A social trail has developed between the Goggins 'equestrian' trail and the Taum Sauk trail atop Goggins. DNR is considering officially placing a trail here, allowing hikers to travel from the Highway A trailhead at Bell Mountain Wilderness to the Goggins trailhead on Highway MM. Several people from this group have already hiked this route.
I think that's it for now. Any questions I can't answer I'll forward to DNR.
John (john.roth@gmail.com)
Saturday, April 15, 2006
200 miles of continuous Ozark Trail
Several newspapers have picked up the latest AP article (and this April 20th article) on the completion of the Middle Fork section that now make it possible to hike over 200 continuous miles on the Ozark Trail. A small amount of OT history is mentioned.