ATVs banned from parts of Cloquet Valley State Forest |
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| Written by Minneapolis Star-Tribune |
| Tuesday, September 22, 2009 |
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More than a thousand miles of ATV trails crisscross the Cloquet Valley State Forest north of Duluth, a web that hunters have long used in their pursuit of deer and grouse. But this fall there are more than 500 signs that mark about one-fifth of that network as off-limits to all-terrain vehicles -- something many hunters aren't happy about. "I know there are going to be a lot of people who drive up there right before deer season and say, 'What the heck is this?'" said Phil Keppers of Duluth, who has hunted deer and grouse in the forest. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources completed the forest-management plan for the state forest in December. Under it, about 232 miles of the 1,017 miles of ATV trails in the forest are closed because they pass through wetlands, are redundant or cannot sustain ATV use. Hunters use their ATVs in the 300,000-acre forest to hunt ruffed grouse, to get to their hunting shacks and deer stands and to haul game out of the woods. Some are taking their unhappiness with the restrictions out on the new signs. "They're being spray-painted, being bent over or being picked up, removed -- gone," said DNR conservation officer Kipp Duncan. "There haven't been a lot shot yet, but that's because people aren't carrying guns yet. That will happen." The firearms deer season starts Nov. 7 in Minnesota. Although the implementation for the Cloquet Valley State Forest plan will happen officially on Dec. 31, enforcement of the new regulations can begin when closure signs are posted, said Brian McCann, a DNR planner in St. Paul. That process will prove trickier if some signs have been taken down, but not impossible. "Even if the signs are gone, they have been posted and it would still be an illegal operation [of an ATV]," Duncan said. The reclassification of trails in the forest was part of a statewide mandate to classify all state forests. It was done by a committee that included representatives of the DNR and St. Louis County. "The reason we did it [closing some areas to ATV use] was to try to provide some balance," said Rich Staffon, DNR area wildlife manager at Cloquet. "We get a fair amount of people who call and are looking for a place to hunt where they don't have to deal with crowds and ATVs. This is an effort to provide that option." -- Source: http://www.startribune.com/local/60472272.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEyqyP4O:DW3ckUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUUsZ |
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Community Voices
“As a rancher who leases public lands for cattle, I’ve seen my share of cut fences and rangeland damaged by ORV use. I’ve also experienced ORV trespass onto my private lands. But I’ve had no way to identify the culprits when reporting trespass or illegal ORV use to local law enforcement. Congress should require that ORVs used on public lands have visible identification plates or decals. Doing so would remove the anonymity enjoyed by ORV riders who are bent on breaking the rules.” - Ambers Thornburgh, second-generation rancher from Oregon who grazes cattle on his private land and adjacent lands leased from the Bureau of Land Management |









