beverly
New member
There's a thoughtful article in the New York Times today: Two Views From The Top (Nice title!)
In it the author reviews the history of fire towers, detailing the conflicting opinions of hikers, environmental purists and historic preservationists. Maybe the title should have been Three Views From The Top.
In it the author reviews the history of fire towers, detailing the conflicting opinions of hikers, environmental purists and historic preservationists. Maybe the title should have been Three Views From The Top.
The towers provoking the most interest are on Hurricane and St. Regis. The Adirondack Council and the Residents' Committee to Protect the Adirondacks are actively campaigning to remove those towers, for being artificial structures, not allowed in wilderness, primitive or canoe areas. The RCPA has a position statement on their website detailing their recommendations regarding specific towers. These are the only two they recommend removing. From the Times article:Once viewed as utilitarian structures, soaring bulwarks against the kinds of wildfires that devastated the Adirondacks in 1903 and 1908, the fire towers have been embraced by historic preservationists and hikers as beloved vestiges of a bygone Adirondack era.
Not everyone is enamored of the fire towers, however. Environmentalists, in particular, often find the network of towers troubling, arguing that they draw foot traffic into sensitive areas. A few groups have focused their attention on 2 of the 31 towers that remain in the Adirondacks, saying they should come down in the interest of wilderness protection.
The Adirondack Council:Peter Bauer, executive director of the Residents' Committee, said that were it not for the fire tower on Hurricane Mountain, some 13,500 acres could be reclassified as wilderness and therefore receive the strongest protection. (While hiking is allowed in wilderness areas, snowmobiles, mountain bikes, motorboats and cars are off limits.)
Moreover, he said, the view from Hurricane Mountain is magnificent even without the tower.
"There are always these issues around human structures in wilderness areas," Mr. Bauer said. "People are insulted when you try to remove the evidence of human presence on the landscape. But we have so little wilderness east of the Mississippi, and we think that if we can create more wilderness areas in the Adirondacks, that's exciting."
The article also mentions the towers on Mt. Arab and Mt. Adams. Mt. Arab has been restored and is a conforming structure. The Open Space Institute, which acquired the Adams tower, hopes to retain it when it sells the land to the state, in order to protect the tower from becoming a "non-conforming" use in the wilderness area, which would mark it for removal. Reading the position paper on the RCPA website (no direct link - see Position Statement Number 2004-9), I like their reasoning - which in part argues for tearing down structures because they have views without the towers. I do think the towers on Hurricane and St. Regis should come down, for the reasons they cite. But I'm not sure that the removal of these towers would diminish hiker traffic - as it would on mountains where towers provide the only "views from the top"."Our concern is with keeping an artifact in the forest preserve that has no practical function other than to concentrate hikers on mountaintops," said John F. Sheehan, a spokesman for the Adirondack Council.
"We're encouraging people to stomp on alpine plants and overuse an area that we ought to be directing people away from."