Greetings VFTT
I received the following email from Jeb Bradley. Jeb sent this to everyone on his personal email list. I wrote to him with suggestion I or he post his comments on VFTT. Result was Jeb gave me permission to post his email here. The thrust of his email is to urge hiking community to send comments to WMNF. We both feel that comments sent in to date and interest shown have had an impact and have bought time in so far as the USFS has delayed decision on the bridge removal. Additional comments sent in at this time will advance the cause for replacing the bridge.
Good Evening Everyone
Hope you don’t mind the group email……
I have written to some of you before about the Thoreau Falls Bridge and the very real possibility the US Forest Service will remove this bridge. I hope that all of you will weigh in with the Forest Service. I will explain how and why this is so important.
In early October I went with the Pemigewasset Ranger out to the Thoreau Falls Bridge. But for the effort of the hiking community I think the Forest Service would have made the decision to remove this bridge. There is no question the bridge needs attention. I accept their view that repair is not an option as they claim one of the big stringer logs is compromised. I have to admit I did not see where the cracks are in that log but accept that they are.
So what that means is that the bridge will have to be replaced and they don’t believe they can use logs from that area as the forest has not regenerated enough. The Ranger indicated they would have to use composite wood materials for the 60 foot long underpinnings of the bridge. These would probably need to be delivered with a helicopter which has happened previously in another wilderness area in the White Mountains. So replacement is feasible.
Here is why I believe this bridge should be replaced.
Access will be hampered. Crossing this river in moderate water height will be difficult for many hikers. The trail to Thoreau Falls will be inaccessible often times.
Safety will be undermined. This bridge is 6 miles from Lincoln Woods and further away from access points to the north and east. People will cross this river in difficult circumstances rather than turn around. I crossed the river twice in moderate/low water. In one spot up stream of the bridge, I was in water to my upper thighs. In another spot the water was knee deep but that spot downstream can change from year to year. I have never been at the bridge in winter…but I am told there is usually open water meaning a dangerous crossing potentially. This is a popular cross country ski route. Any safety issues will also impact rescuers.
Does removal of this bridge undermine wilderness values? In my opinion not one bit. Approaching from Lincoln Woods or Thoreau Falls, a hiker does not see the bridge until very close to it. Getting to the bridge from Lincoln Woods on the Pemi East Side Trail is a lovely walk on a straight old rail bed with many ties remaining. This is not the usual idea of wilderness (without human influence) so to me rebuilding this bridge does not undermine wilderness at all—given the nature of the Pemi East Side Trail.
Cost: I was struck by the fact that cost was scarcely an issue mentioned by the rangers during our hike or scarcely mentioned in the literature they gave us.
SO HERE IS WHAT I WOULD ASK YOU TO DO!!!!! Write an email to Dan Abbe of the White Mountain National Forest to comment on why this bridge should be replaced. Even if you have done it once PLEASE do it AGAIN. They said they had only received 70 comments. Quite frankly I think that while they are listening to concerns about removal, I believe they would prefer to remove the bridge. That is why continuing to file comments is so important.
Comments should reflect the 4 points I made: Safety, diminished access, not truly a wilderness, and lack of cost concerns. Comments don’t need to be long. I have attached letters I sent to the White Mountain National Forest as well as Sen Ayotte and Shaheen.
PLEASE email your hiking friends as I have emailed you and ask that they file comments also. It is vital they receive as many comments as possible.
Here is Dan Abbe’s e-mail: jabbeATfs.fed.us
And phone: 603-536-6105
I would also ask that every comment you file with Dan Abbe of the Forest Service you also file with Sen Ayotte and Sen Shaheen. Here are the links for them:
https://www.ayotte.senate.gov/ and
http://www.shaheen.senate.gov/
Filing comments with Sens Ayotte and Shaheen is vitally important.
Lastly --- here is a link to an article in the Concord Monitor on the Thoreau Falls Bridge. Its very well written. URL:
http://www.concordmonitor.com/home/...ound-fate-of-dilapidated-thoreau-falls-bridge
THANKS VERY MUCH!!!
Jeb