RoySwkr said:
What is the MA# for Wilderness Study Area or whatever it's called?
Existing Wilderness is MA 5.1 and Recommended Wilderness is MA 9.1. This is found in the latest
Forest Plan, section 3
Management Area Direction, p. 3-9 and 3-75. These sections dictate essentially all of the specific rules, in addition to the brief general restrictions I quoted from that paragraph in the Wilderness Act.
David Metsky said:
I know about the 10 person rule, but I've never heard the 4 person rule.
There is no 4 person "rule" but the Forest Plan does mention a preference toward smaller groups in the different zones (a new feature of the Forest Plan). The 10-person rule is a standard (S), not a guideline (G) in the new Forest Plan (see p. 3-11 item S-3), and applies to all Wilderness areas. Standards are mandatory as per the plan, I'm not quite sure what guidelines are for, they are either left up to the individual administrators of the various districts, or they give more flexibility to the WMNF as a whole to change things over time as they see fit.
If you look at
appendix E of the Plan, it outlines 4 different zones depending on use intensity, and each has a different "education message". Zone D includes a few specific high-traffic areas (summits, certain trail junctions, tentsites). Zone C includes the more frequented trails. Zone B includes the less frequented trails. Zone A includes everywhere that is at least 500 feet from trails. For zones B-D, the "education message" is that group sizes should be "preferably six or fewer" and in zone A "preferably four or fewer" (see p. E-27).
Interestingly enough, the number of people allowed in a group in Wilderness apparently varies in different forests, which I didn't realize... I just ran across some Wilderness regs for out
West which allow 12 or 15.
I do wish they would have given some rationale for these particular numbers & why they are beneficial, they only give this sort of verbiage (p. E-26):
Upon entering Wilderness there will be noticeable differences from the land left behind—the signs don’t have as much information and are fewer in number, the trails may seem less distinct, there aren’t large groups on the trail or at campsites. All of this is part of the Wilderness experience that the Forest Service has strived to maintain.