Yeah, that's what I've heard as well, so it makes some sense they think keeping Franklin closed will stop folks from getting into trouble down there.bobcat wrote: ↑February 20th, 2020, 2:33 pmBy all accounts of those who have begun scouting it, Oneonta just disappears under rocks, debris, and shrubbery once you get down into the canyon below the junction with Franklin Ridge. Don't underestimate the effects of the fire on those slope trails. Oneonta is in its third winter since the fire. Basically about 30 or more years of damage happened in the fall/winter of 2017.
Bootprints on the Primrose Path (Feb. 16, 2020)
Re: Bootprints on the Primrose Path (Feb. 16, 2020)
Karl
Back on the trail, again...
Back on the trail, again...
- retired jerry
- Posts: 14424
- Joined: May 28th, 2008, 10:03 pm
Re: Bootprints on the Primrose Path (Feb. 16, 2020)
as everyone knows
after a fire it's unstable for a few years
even if a trail is currently clear, trees will fall over it
it makes some sense to leave trails in heavily burned areas closed for a while
after a fire it's unstable for a few years
even if a trail is currently clear, trees will fall over it
it makes some sense to leave trails in heavily burned areas closed for a while
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- Posts: 132
- Joined: May 28th, 2008, 10:03 pm
Re: Bootprints on the Primrose Path (Feb. 16, 2020)
That lower section between Foxglove Way and Foxglove Trail was used to get around the wet area on the Wahkeena Trail and we did not need it after the water area was worked on a few years ago after the '91 Fire. Same with the Primrose as the we did not clear the blow downs after the '91 Fire and let it go natural. People keep walking around the top of Devil's Rest onto the Foxglove and each person walks another few feet so it looks like it goes somewhere (like a deer trail). Better to bring clippers and keep the Foxgloves open as the FS has no plans to do maintenance on it. Had permission years ago by Claude (lead FS Trail person for 42 years in the Gorge) use the trail as they used it to come down from the upper Basin Road for their own trail work.