ryan207
New member
No, this is Wilderness, not wilderness.
ahh yes, please forgive me for not capitalizing, it really makes it much more dramatic.
No, this is Wilderness, not wilderness.
When the Pemi Wilderness was created, we were all ecstatic to think that there would be a wilderness, or something as close to it as possible, in our backyard. The Pemi is probably the most isolated of the mountainous areas, when you consider that there are only a few vantage points within the wilderness where signs of ongoing human activity are available.
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Seems quite counter to the claim it will be done in winter on frozen ground to prevent trail damage.
I suspect the bridge will still be there for some time, and I bet they'll even be using it, and that the work will start with the trail closure and reroute. Can't brush a trail once snow's on the ground.
It makes sense to me that we should have an area that is as free from possible from human intervention, and that puts the hiker more into the wilderness than anywhere else possible in the Whites.
What really strikes me is the bifurcation of the Wilderness into two halves, where the only way to cross between them is to now hike back out of the Wilderness into a crowded human environment at Lincoln Woods and cross the river on a bridge within sight of a man-made highway and re-enter the Wilderness on the opposite side. Having to do this would ruin my "Wilderness experience" more than any wooden suspension bridge ever could.
What really strikes me is the bifurcation of the Wilderness into two halves, where the only way to cross between them is to now hike back out of the Wilderness into a crowded human environment at Lincoln Woods and cross the river on a bridge within sight of a man-made highway and re-enter the Wilderness on the opposite side. Having to do this would ruin my "Wilderness experience" more than any wooden suspension bridge ever could.
I guess I don't see a wilderness with a river running through it as a problem. It's only a problem when there's a perception that some unnatural entity should provide access to both sides.
If you (the general you) read the end of the comment section it mentioned possibly reviewing if a bridge could be built outside the "Wilderness" area. How funny would that be- take this bridge down and build it 3.1 miles away. Would people really feel better if that happened?
There are already stepping stones right at the Wilderness Boundary by the Franconia Brook campsite. I've crossed on those without a problem. No good in high water but fine the rest of the year.IIf you (the general you) read the end of the comment section it mentioned possibly reviewing if a bridge could be built outside the "Wilderness" area. How funny would that be- take this bridge down and build it 3.1 miles away. Would people really feel better if that happened?
I'm done with this one, it's a dead horse, but what I take away from it is to remember for future DM occasions like this that the "extended comment" period substitutes, in fact, for the appeal. It's all legal, no sense beating one's head against the wall (other than to change the law). The extended comment period is the time to pull out the stops, invoke the political process, and contact your elected representative(s) for support.
What really strikes me is the bifurcation of the Wilderness into two halves, where the only way to cross between them is to now hike back out of the Wilderness into a crowded human environment at Lincoln Woods and cross the river on a bridge within sight of a man-made highway
I'd call it a ship set to sail, rather than a dead horse... I still plan to contact my Congressional representatives, regardless of whether this has an impact on the immediate bridge-removal project.I'm done with this one, it's a dead horse
Lots of people including kids in bathing suits swimming at Franconia Falls ford the riverAlthough I've never tried it, there are times when the river looks fordable to me, although it might be that you would have to walk a ways to find the right place to cross.
I would say that the watershed is 4 times as large although somebody with a planimeter or mapping software may correct me. And note that a lot of people choose to bypass that Franconia Brook crossing by bushwhacking. I fully understand why the FS wishes to discourage crossing there.Is it really more difficult to ford than the Franconia Brook on the Lincoln Brook trail?
What I haven't yet figured out is what the FS will do when the Thoreau Falls Trail bridge needs replacing (I always thought it looked worse than the suspension bridge), there is no good alternate route for that.
Even when taking into consideration the closure of 0.7 mile of trail? Apparently the Forest Service thinks the crossing is (or could be) substantial enough that they have taken steps to discourage people from traveling in that direction.Smitty, I'm not sure I would consider that a bifurcation. Its not the Berlin wall. It's a fairly benign water crossing (unless your greased and naked ). Certainly at all the times I have seen it. There are lots of places I have had to do water crossings in the Whites. I don't understand why this one is being portrayed as reducing access in any substantive way.
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