G-
Not sure about that. We've got a couple of Karnak's we hike with.
Not sure about that. We've got a couple of Karnak's we hike with.
Grumpy said:This is the common sense rule...
Peakbagr said:A good re-balancing of the "Force". Yoda would be proud.
No harm, no foul.
BrentD22 said:I once was reading something about leave no trace and it mentioned how a group of 11 people (or maybe it was 15) walking in a straight line would leave sign of a trail.
I guess it means that 11 (or 15) people could create a trail just by walking in a straight line.
Back in Ecology 101 the prof used this as an example pointing out the various transition zones from the center of the path which was bare ground to the edge where the grass was normal. There were different plant species growing in each zone according to tolerance to frequent versus occasional trampling.Pete_Hickey said:Have you ever seen paths on a campus, where people take 'shortcuts' iacross the grass, instead of using the sidewalk. Ever hear the story of optimal campus sidewalk layout? Designers planted grass everywhere, then watched the paths develop as people walked, then installed sidewalks where the paths developped.
It is a bit more complicated in forests, but is surprisingly similar.
Neil said:There were different plant species growing in each zone according to tolerance to frequent versus occasional trampling.
WMNF guidelines for Wilderness limit group size on bushwhacks to 4 for perhaps this reason. Of course for safety reasons they suggest a minimum group of 4 and if anything you might think it should be larger in Wilderness where rescue might take longerBrentD22 said:I guess this says you should bushwack in small groups and if you must hike in not so small groups stagger the line not to create a path.
RoySwkr said:When I climbed Mendon 20+ years ago there was a herd path obvious enough to be followed in winter, so they do become obscure in time (perhaps a couple fallen trees scattered hikers).
as an aside, this reminded me of my college days at a certain engineering school, there was a herd path across one corner of a grassy oval called the "nerd path", even to the point where the ends of the "nerd path" were marked in paint on nearby pavement. Phys. plant eventually removed it & blocked off the grass to let it recover. (I never got the "nerd path" pun until reading this thread. )Pete_Hickey said:Path creation is quite interesting. Even in non-woods areas. Have you ever seen paths on a campus, where people take 'shortcuts' iacross the grass, instead of using the sidewalk. Ever hear the story of optimal campus sidewalk layout? Designers planted grass everywhere, then watched the paths develop as people walked, then installed sidewalks where the paths developped.
BrentD22 said:I once was reading something about leave no trace and it mentioned how a group of 11 people (or maybe it was 15) walking in a straight line would leave sign of a trail.
I guess it means that 11 (or 15) people could create a trail just by walking in a straight line. I guess this says you should bushwack in small groups and if you must hike in not so small groups stagger the line not to create a path.
HighHorse said:when was the last time you saw a group of 12 people bushwacking?
dms said:I remember trips in the 80's when Gene Daniell used to lead trips to White Cap and Boundry that were at least 20 to 30 people.
Arghman said:also note -- crustose lichens (e.g. map lichen & ring lichen) generally are unaffected by foot travel or anything else short of scraping/grinding them off with another hard surface.
Arghman said:also note -- crustose lichens (e.g. map lichen & ring lichen) generally are unaffected by foot travel or anything else short of scraping/grinding them off with another hard surface.
Works for rock climbers...Pete_Hickey said:Hmmmm.. Could be an interesting way or marking an above-treeline route, when rocks for cairns are not available..
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