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18/06/2020

Here is Also Leopold demonstrating what mechanized means and how it is used in relation to motorized: Leopold: Your Hudson Bay Indian now has a put-put, and your mountaineer a Ford. If I had to make a living by canoe or packhorse, I should likely do likewise, for both are gruelling labor. But we who seek wilderness travel for sport are foiled when we are forced to compete with mechanized sub-stitutes. It is footless to execute a portage to the tune of motor-launches, or to turn out your bell-mare in the pasture of a summer hotel. It is better to stay home."
Leopold is using mechanized and motorized as synonyms because that is what they are. He is saying that Wilderness explorers are losing the concept of laborious travel and exchanging those skills for nonhuman, mechanized propulsion like a putt-putt (steam powered) boat and a Ford which is a type of motor vehicle. Opening up the wilderness to human powered endeavours like bicycles, alpine touring skiers, splitboarders, rock climbers, etc, is precisely the type of sport Leopold wanted in Wilderness. Foot-powered couldn't be any clearer. Primitive is/was another way of saying nonmotorized/non-mechanized.

10/06/2020

Mountain journal
Banning people is sure way to make people anti-conservation. I don't think you are singling out bicycles, but I do think you are failing to see the big picture. I have a friend who hunts elk quite frequently in the Fall, he chases elk herds all over the place, while firing bullets. He tells stories of how dangerous and scary it is to have hunters on top of each other with bullets wizzing by their head. Hunters have the greatest access of all user groups, a hunting permit gets you access to all sorts of places that normal people can't like refuges. Hunters have access to Wilderness areas with luxurious camps that they pay upwards of tens of thousands of dollars to commercial outfitters in an area that was supposed to "free from commercial enterprise". Bicyclists, hikers, horseback riders and others, will never have a tiny fraction of the impact caused by hunters, and for some reason, they will never have as much access as hunters have.
I have also seen a dogs chase elk herds around too, yet for some reason dogs have greater access to public lands then humans on a bike, perhaps the four legged friends have better congressional lobbying.
It's no wonder that wildlife is skittish around humans, as their most frequent interactions force them into literally running for their lives, whether it be from bullets or pets. There is a tendency for predators like grizzly bears and mountain lions to avoid high frequency human activity. This causes prey animals like moose, elk, deer, and baby grizzlies to congregate near areas of high human frequency despite the fact that dogs usually chase, because being chased by a dog is still better then being chased by an adult grizzly bear or lion. There is a momma grizzly bear called 399 that is rumored to be responsible for half of the grizzly population, and she is a common site along the road. If it wasn't for people scaring away murderous adult grizzlies, the grizzly population would be much smaller.
The study you are referncing in your first paragraph is not as conclusive as you make it out to be. The Oregon elk study, is such a small sample size that it is effectively meaningless. Studying one elk herd with few data points isn't good science, and for all of these publications to quote it is isn't a good look for the Tribune. Also, if you read the whole article, they say twice that the science to support their antibike claims isn't there. Even if there was data to support their claim that bicycles spook into running further, that is only the first step to proving bicycles have an overall negative effect on the herd. Even if you were to prove that bicycle use is somehow killing elk, it would still be an insignificant number compared to the 100,000 killed by hunters every year, and many wildlife biologists feel that certain herds are too numerous to risk the spread of disease and their numbers need to be reduced for the health of the herd. Another point about hunting, hunters go for the biggest male elk with the best rack, and that rack is a good defender against predators. If an elk was to die from running a few extra meters then they were going to die either way and the herd would be stronger when the weak die off.

06/02/2020

MULTIPLE-USE SUSTAINED-YIELD ACT OF 1960
1(Public Law 86–517; Approved June 12, 1960)
AN ACT To authorize and direct that the national forests be managed under principles of multiple use and to produce a sustained yield of products and services, and for other purposes
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That ø16 U.S.C.
528 it is the policy of the Congress that the national forests are established and shall be administered for outdoor recreation, range, timber, watershed, and wildlife and fish purposes.

24/01/2020

Post 13 (continuing post 4)
In addition to Michael McCloskey, both the Sierra Club and the Wilderness Society directly confronted the Forest Service over their decision to allow bicycles on Wilderness trails. The Sierra Club made the same terrible argument as Michael did in the 1965 Statement on Proposed Regulation of the Secretary of Agriculture Governing the Administration of National Forest Wilderness, September 30:

Mechanical Transport. Section 5 of the regulation regards mechanical transport as an inclusive term for motor vehicles and motorboats. It defines it as any traveling contrivance with a non-living power source. However, paragraph 4(c) of the Act distinguishes between motor vehicles, motorboats, and any other form of mechanical transport. The enumeration of these as separate items makes it clear that mechanical transport means something besides that denoted by the previous terms. Most likely mechanical
transport was meant to refer to traveling contrivances powered by living power sources, such as wagons drawn by horses, bicycles, and wheeled cargo carriers. There is evidence that the authors of the Wilderness Act did intend to exclude these conveyances from wilderness.
Section 5 of the regulation thus should be re-drawn to implement the intended meaning [of]
paragraph 4(c) of the Act.24..

The argument that mechanical transport must mean something powered by humans is as absurd as saying that motor boats means a human powered boat. If motor vehicles is defined as a travelling contrivance powered by nonliving fuel then a motorboat cannot mean a travelling contrivance powered by nonliving fuel, as it would be a redundancy in their mind. This is an absurdist argument that was rightfully denied by the legislature. The authors of the Wilderness Act were very much alive and in charge of the Senate when this letter was written. If the Forest Service was operating contrary to the Will of Congress, then they would have corrected the regulators who were distinctly allowing bicycles on Wilderness trails. The Senators vote on laws and the regulators for the agency interpret the intent of Congress. Both of these groups are in agreement that bicycles are a conforming usage of Wilderness trails. The authors of the Wilderness Act, assuming they are not appointed/elected members of the US Government, do not have an overriding opinion on what is or isn't law. The Sierra Club, despite their important stature and best efforts, failed to change the law makers assertion that human powered devices like bicycles are allowed in Wilderness.

Stewart M. Brandborg of the Wilderness Society wrote a letter to Edward P. Cliff, the Forest Service Cheif on September 28, 1965:

The definition of mechanical transport in Paragraph 5 should specifically include contrivances powered by living power sources (such as wagons drawn by horses, bicycles, and wheeled cargo carriers) as well as contrivances propelled by nonliving power sources.
(See Paragraph 4(c) of the Act, which distinguishes between motor vehicles, motorboats, and other forms of mechanical transportation.). The use of various types of wheeled equipment should be specifically prohibited within the regulations to conform with this provision of the Act.

Once again the Forest Service denied the insistence of these powerful lobbying agencies with the support and oversight of sitting Congresspeople who passed the Wilderness Act. Bicycles were allowed in Wilderness areas in 1966 because the governing body of the US wanted them allowed. Any attempt to blanketly restrict access of Wilderness trails to bicycles is an assault on the intent of Congress with regards to the Wilderness Act of 1964.

Post 12The Forest Service manual was rewritten in 1984 to redefine Mechanical Transport as any contrivance for moving pe...
24/01/2020

Post 12
The Forest Service manual was rewritten in 1984 to redefine Mechanical Transport as any contrivance for moving people or material in or over land, water, or air, having moving parts, that provides a mechanical advantage to the user, and that is powered by a living or nonliving power source. This includes, but is not limited to, sailboats, hang gliders, parachutes, bicycles, game carriers, carts, and wagons. It does not include wheelchairs when used as necessary medical appliances. It also does not include skis, snowshoes, rafts, canoes, sleds, travois, or similar primitive devices without moving parts.

The Forest Service fails to give a definition of moving parts, mechanical advantage, or primitive, so the reader is stuck looking at the examples provided to further understand their meaning. Primitive typically refers to nonmotorized devices, but it is being used differently. There are many contradictions in the list.

Banned Devices:

sailboats were invented in 1300BCE, they don't rely on mechanical advantage and moving parts unless the sail has a winch.

Hang gliders were invented in 1890 and they don't rely on moving parts from a mechanical advantage standpoint.

Parachutes were invented in 1790 and they also don't rely on a mechanical advantage provided by moving parts.

Wheelbarrow (100ce) has moving parts which provide mechanical advantage.

A typical game carrier (cart) is a sled, according to Cabela's: https://www.cabelas.com/category/Game-Carts-Carriers/104353380.uts
There are wheeled game carriers as well, but those are most comparable to the wheelbarrow above which do have moving parts and mechanical advantage.

Wagons were first invented in 1700s and rely on moving parts and mechanical advantage provided by wheels and axles.

Allowed Devices:

Skis rely on moving parts for mechanical advantage, https://skimo.co/skinning-slope-angle. The modern concept of ski touring was first invented in 1890, but technology only made the equipment more widespread in capability in the last thirty to forty years when the mechanical toe pivot was combined with a heel latch on a frame binding, https://www.wildsnow.com/backcountry-skiing-history/backcountry-skiing-ski-touring-gear-history/

The modern snowshoe that relies on a mechanical advantage provided by a moving toe piece and spikes was first invented in 1972. Primitive snowshoes were invented thousands of years ago and they do not have a rotating toe piece.

The first rubber raft was invented in 1840 and it relies on oars for movement which are a second class lever that provide mechanical advantage of less than one for transportation purposes.

Sleds (?bc) are the only allowed device so far that lacks moving parts, and most resembles it's easiest design, provided it is made of wood. Sleds still benefit on the mechanical advantage provided by an inclined plane when used on a slope.

The travois (?bc) do not rely on moving parts for mechanical advantage, but they sure would be destructive to trails provided the trails were wide enough to accommodate their use.

The Forest Service's new 1984 manual for allowed and banned usages does not mesh with their rationale for all usages, not just bicycles. The blatant inconsistency and ambiguity makes this new 1984 definition unenforceable based on US Code 706 (post 8). The previous understanding of nonliving power sources was clear and enforceable.

Primitive previously meant nonmotorized (post 6) and they use it differently in this 1984 manual without providing a definition of what it means in this context.

Mechanical advantage and moving parts are also too undefined to provide any focus to the intent of the Forest Service's new rationale. This change was made without the oversight of the Congress that passed the Wilderness Act and without input from the acting members of Congress.

The only people who are qualified to determine the nuances of the Wilderness Act are the members of Congress who passed the Wilderness Act in 1964 with the intent of allowing bicycles. The only way a substantial change to the Wilderness Act can be made is though an act of Congress, not by a rogue agency acting on external pressure to made a tremendous change to the intent of the Wilderness Act as was the case with the Forest Service in 1984.

Did you know that the first wheelbarrows, invented in China, were considered top secret military hardware? Learn about the invention of the wheelbarrow.

Post 11 Advocates for motoring sometimes call for elimination of bicyclists or pedestrians from roadways, or for increas...
27/11/2019

Post 11 Advocates for motoring sometimes call for elimination of bicyclists or pedestrians from roadways, or for increased regulatory burdens to be placed on bicyclists (ostensibly to equal the expense of motoring regulations). Their argument often begins with the motoring-centric assumption that roads are for cars, and that because motoring on roadways is regulated as a privilege, then any use of roadways is also a privilege, and not a true right. Historically and legally speaking, however, this claim is inaccurate. Recognition of an individual’s basic right to travel on shared roads dates back thousands of years.

Roads evolved from unimproved footpaths and trails over five thousand years ago. Some roads were constructed and maintained by private landowners, and others by governments. The earliest challenges to public travel over these routes came from landowners or other local inhabitants who might extort money from travelers or block travel by force or physical obstruction. Public use of roads was compelling for access to water, food, and trade, for transport of goods and materials, and for military purposes. Across the world, laws evolved to define the rights and responsibilities of travelers and landowners.

Some of the first written descriptions of travel rights are found in second century BC Roman property laws that established a hierarchy of easements that prioritized pedestrian access over wagon passage. The Romans were prolific road builders, creating a network of durable paved highways that spanned most of Europe including England. While of strategic military importance to the Roman government, these roads were public ways permitted to all. Any act to block or hinder travel upon public roads was prohibited by Roman law. Within the city of Rome, traffic congestion became such a nuisance that Julius Caesar banned wheeled traffic in the city during most of the daytime.

The tradition of public passage, however, survived even in the dark ages. In the twelfth century, the seminal English law text Tractatus of Glanvil written for Henry II declared the legal status of the king’s highway and the public right to travel upon it.

The concept of right of way originated in English law at this time with a dual meaning: First, the right of the king to establish public roads across private properties, and second, the public’s right of passage on such ways. The common-law right to travel on public ways followed the colonists to North America.

In the late 1800s controversy erupted over a new type of vehicle that was speeding along rural roads and urban streets, occasionally frightening horses and pedestrians: the bicycle. Considered a nuisance by some non-bicyclists, cities and states enacted numerous bans on bicycle travel (for instance, Kentucky banned bicycles from most major roads). Numerous court cases involving bicyclists’ road rights resulted in inconsistent outcomes. In cases involving collisions, English and American courts eventually concluded that the rules of the road for carriages should apply equally to bicyclists. These rules prohibited speeding or otherwise operating in a manner dangerous to others.

Eventually the higher courts in the states would reach conclusions protecting the right to travel by bicycle on public roads. In Swift vs City of Topeka (1890) the Kansas Supreme Court stated:

“Each citizen has the absolute right to choose for himself the mode of conveyance he desires, whether it be by wagon or carriage, by horse, motor or electric car, or by bicycle . . . . This right of the people to the use of the public streets of a city is so well established and so universally recognized in this country that it has become a part of the alphabet of fundamental rights of the citizen.”

In the case of the self-propelled automobile, however, the Kansas Supreme Court spoke too soon. In the 1890s, automobile travel was primarily a novelty for the wealthy, but motor traffic volumes and speeds grew quickly on public roads over the next thirty years. With popularization of motoring came a staggering epidemic of crash fatalities and injuries for pedestrians and vehicle operators. In response, cities across the country enacted new regulations on motoring ranging from licensing requirements to outright bans. Automobile organizations challenged the regulations in court based on right-to-travel grounds, and won many of the early cases. But as motoring’s death toll continued to increase each year, and government regulators made a stronger case that improper motoring violated the travel rights of others, the courts relented. By 1920, no court found the right to travel to be sufficient grounds to strike down a driver license requirement for motor vehicle use. For instance, in the federal case Hendrick v. Maryland 235 US 610 (1915):

“The movement of motor vehicles over the highways is attended by constant and serious dangers to the public, and is also abnormally destructive to the ways themselves . . . In the absence of national legislation covering the subject a State may rightfully prescribe uniform regulations necessary for public safety and order in respect to the operation upon its highways of all motor vehicles — those moving in interstate commerce as well as others. And to this end it may require the registration of such vehicles and the licensing of their drivers . . . This is but an exercise of the police power uniformly recognized as belonging to the States and essential to the preservation of the health, safety and comfort of their citizens.”

Drivers who were charged with driving a motor vehicle without a license would continue to attempt a defense based on the right to travel, but to no avail. For instance, in State v. Davis (Missouri 1988):

“The state of Missouri, by making the licensing requirements in question, is not prohibiting Davis from expressing or practicing his religious beliefs or from traveling throughout this land. If he wishes, he may walk, ride a bicycle or horse…. He cannot, however, operate a motor vehicle on the public highways without … a valid operator’s license.”

The State v. Davis decision calls out the importance of walking and bicycling in supporting the right to travel. If driving a motor vehicle is an issued and revocable privilege, then it stands to reason that some other modes must remain in order to preserve the right to travel. Otherwise, only the privileged could continue to travel independently on the essential trips that people have been making for thousands of years.

Bicycle registration programs are often proposed and sometimes implemented to combat bicycle theft and to raise revenue. Most government-operated bicycle registration programs in the US fail due to high implementation costs, low participation and revenue, complications for bicyclists traveling between jurisdictions, and increased friction between police and low-income populations. Today, Hawaii is the only US state with a mandatory bicycle registration requirement, which succeeds primarily because it is implemented as an excise tax on new bikes at the point of sale, and also because out-of-state bicyclists cannot ride across the state’s border.

As a note, property taxes have historically been the revenue method for paying for roadways. The high costs of the construction and maintenance of roads due to motoring, compared to traditional human and animal powered means, led to the institution of a fuel tax. Although the first gas tax was instituted around 1932, dedication to highways and the Highway Trust Fund wasn’t in place until 1956. According to a 2015 report done by the US PIRG, the fuel tax today covers less than half the costs of maintaining and expanding roadways. The resulting shortfall is made up from other sources of tax revenue at the state and local levels, and is generated by drivers and non-drivers alike. Most communities elect to promote the public benefits of bicycling and walking rather than deter these activities by applying a usage tax.

Many US residents do not drive motor vehicles due to limitations of age, health, or economics, or simply by choice. Worldwide, motorists are a clear minority; people outnumber motor vehicles 7 to 1. In much of the world, the bicycle is the most popular vehicle choice for travel, essential for the mobility of people with modest incomes or in areas with a scarcity of space that can be dedicated for motoring (or even for parking). Promotion of motoring at the expense of bicycling and walking would repurpose our roads from public rights of way open to all users into specialized facilities reserved for the privileged.

The only roads legally prohibited to bicyclists and pedestrians in North Carolina are fully controlled access highways, aka freeways. Prohibition from such highways is acceptable only because the full control of access prohibits driveway access between the highways and the adjacent land; the adjacent properties are accessible by other roads that are not fully controlled access and therefore open to bicyclists. The prohibition from fully controlled access highways does not prevent pedestrians and bicyclists from reaching their destinations, but may sometimes require longer routes.

According to the Complete Streets policy adopted by the North Carolina Board of Transportation in July 2009, “[t]he North Carolina Department of Transportation, in its role as steward over the transportation infrastructure, is committed to providing an efficient multi-modal transportation network in North Carolina such that the access, mobility, and safety needs of motorists, transit users, bicyclists, and pedestrians of all ages and abilities are safely accommodated.” The NCDOT Roadway Design Manual says “It is the responsibility of the Section Engineers and Project Engineers to be assured that all plans, specifications, and estimates (PS&E’s) for federal-aid projects conform to the design criteria in the “A Policy on Geometric Design of Highways and Streets” (2011).” That document, also known as the AASHTO Green Book, states: “The bicycle should also be considered a design vehicle where bicycle use is allowed.” It should be clear that bicyclists are intended users of all roadways in North Carolina except fully controlled access highways (freeways), and that it is our government’s job to facilitate this travel, not deter it. https://www.bikewalknc.org/2019/03/historical-basis-of-road-rights-for-pedestrians-and-bicyclists-2/

March 4, 2019 Historical Basis of Road Rights for Pedestrians and Bicyclists Advocates for motoring sometimes call for elimination of bicyclists or pedestrians from roadways, or for increased regulatory burdens to be placed on bicyclists (ostensibly to equal the expense of motoring regulations). The...

21/11/2019

Wildlife habitat and bike trails coexist

11/11/2019

Post 9
Mechanized transport is the replacement of human or animal effort with that of a mechanically powered machine. The word is used less and less but it is common with regards to agriculture (tractors) and with armored millitary vehicles in the millitary.
Dictionary.com defines mechanize with regards to vehicles as: to equip (an army, etc) with motorized or armoured vehicles.
The confusion with regards to bicycles stems from the fact that mechanize first started being used in the 1600's with regards to human and animal manual labor. Thus the usage of mechanization to refer to manual labor i.e. bikes is historically accurate but it isn't currently accurate. The trend of referring to manual labor as mechanized stopped when electrification began. In modern conversation, there isn't any reference to mechanize equating itself to predominantly human efforts such as cycling, except of course with anti-cycling advocates or those who embrace their misuse of mechanize.

09/11/2019

Post 8

U.S. Code § 706.Scope of review
U.S. Code

To the extent necessary to decision and when presented, the reviewing court shall decide all relevant questions of law, interpret constitutional and statutory provisions, and determine the meaning or applicability of the terms of an agency action. The reviewing court shall—
(1)compel agency action unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed; and
(2)hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be—
(A)arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law;
(B)contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity;
(C)in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right;
(D)without observance of procedure required by law;
(E)unsupported by substantial evidence in a case subject to sections 556 and 557 of this title or otherwise reviewed on the record of an agency hearing provided by statute; or
(F)unwarranted by the facts to the extent that the facts are subject to trial de novo by the reviewing court.
In making the foregoing determinations, the court shall review the whole record or those parts of it cited by a party, and due account shall be taken of the rule of prejudicial error.
(Pub. L. 89–554, Sept. 6, 1966, 80 Stat. 393.)

Post 7We wish to call to your attention an inconsistency in the regulations pertaining to Wilderness administration. Mos...
01/11/2019

Post 7

We wish to call to your attention an inconsistency in the regulations pertaining to Wilderness administration. Most of you are aware of this but need direction on how to handle the matter pending resolution.

36 CFR 261.16(b) states: "possessing or using a hang glider or bicycle". During the last CFR revisions we intended to remove "or bicycle" but the change did not get effected.

36 CFR 261.57 was amended to read: "(h) possessing or using a bicycle, cart, wagon, or other vehicle." it was our intent to provide for the prohibition of bicycles only where their presence created a conflict or problem and implement the prohibition by use of an order for a specific wilderness.

The Washington Office staff is taking action to correct the editorial error and amend 36 CFR 261.16(b). Until this is done, OGC advises us not to cite a person for possesing or using a bicycle. They believe any citation will be dismissed as long as there is an ambiguity in the regulations. You will be notified when the correction is made.

We recommend you call this to the attention of all Forest supervisors and district rangers.

J.B. Hilman
Associate Deputy Cheif

https://m.facebook.com/SustainableTrailsCoalition/photos/a.741728455935955/1375281179247343/?type=3&source=54

Flashback Friday! This March 1982 memo shows that the USDA Forest Service was in the process of correcting an earlier regulation that prohibited bicycles in Wilderness. Their directive was to prohibit/allow bikes on a case by case basis. (Sound familiar?) This would last until 1984 when special interest groups convinced the federal agency to ban bikes in all Wilderness areas.

14/10/2019

Post 6
Primitive lands are a big part of the Wilderness Act. The authors were concerned that people were recreating in a setting that had far too many modern disturbances, so the Wilderness was set aside land to provide primitive recreation . Primitive lands are defined as:

PRIMITIVE

Generally, it is on a setting of at least 5,000

acres and 3 miles away from all roads and trails

with motorized use (or has sufficient spatial or

topographic characteristics to allow a sense of

solitude). Access is via non-motorized trails or

cross country. Very low interactions with other

visitors. Very high chance of solitude; unmodified

natural or natural-appearing environment

Post 5Bicycles capable of being ridden on trails are as old as bicycles themselves. The USFS was keenly aware of bicycle...
14/10/2019

Post 5

Bicycles capable of being ridden on trails are as old as bicycles themselves. The USFS was keenly aware of bicycles being used on trails long before the marketing term, mountain bikes was invented.The 1966 Trails For America booklet highlights the American trail cyclist:

https://www.nps.gov/noco/learn/management/upload/trails-for-america-1966.pdf

page 98....The primary objectives of the federal park and forest trail Program would be: 1. To achieve better geographical balance nationally and regionally in locating trails where population pressures are greatest. 2. To coordinate trail development between Federal and State agencies so that their efforts will be complementary. 3. To locate and design trails that will have maximum appeal, and in which the safety of the recreationist is paramount. 4. To provide adequately for each of several kinds of users—foot, horseback, bicycle, and trail scooter. 5. To encourage and provide use of some special trails during all seasons of the year.

page 104...To keep pace with future demands, present National Park trails should be expanded. Bicycle trails are a special need. Regulations presently prohibit the use of bicycles on park trails, except in National Recreation Areas and in a few other locations. This policy now is undergoing review. Plans call for bicycle facilities at Cape Cod National Seashore, Fire Island National Seashore, Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, Rock Creek Park and related points in the Washington, D.C., area, and certain proposed areas such as Sleeping Bear Dunes and Indiana Dunes National Lakeshores. Bicycle trails already are under construction at Cape Cod and budgeted for Fire Island. Trail scooters, like automobiles, are forbidden on trails in the National Parks In some instances the National Park Service has found that use of trails by both hikers and horseback riders is incompatible. Where heavy travel occurs and trail deterioration caused by horseback travel results in problems for the foot traveler, it may be necessary to develop and maintain separate trails.

page 31...Where horseback and trail scooter traffic or demand is heavy, it may eventually be desirable to develop trails for each of these uses and another trail for foot and bicycle use

page 16...A limited number of national scenic trails should be established to provide opportunities of extended foot, horseback, and bicycle trips for Americans in all parts of the Nation. National scenic trails should have natural, scenic, or historic qualities that give them recreation potential of national significance. Such trails typically should be several hundred miles in length, have overnight shelters at appropriate intervals, and be interconnected with other major trails that provide opportunity for extended hiking or riding experiences. They would be the major axes of networks of trails branching out to nearby points of special attraction serving areas of population throughout the country. As the initial unit of the system, the existing Appalachian Trail, which extends 2,000 miles from Mt. Katahdin, Maine, through 14 States to Springer Mountain, Georgia, should be authorized immediately as a national scenic trail.

page 21...Trails represent a major opportunity to satisfy the demand for outdoor recreation. By their nature, they afford a low-concentration, dispersed type of recreation that is much sought after today. Trails are the means to some of the most beneficial kinds of exercise—-walking, hiking, horseback riding, and cycling. Trails enable people to reach prime areas for hunting, fishing, and camping; they lead to areas prized by students of nature and history; they are used by artists and photographers; they help to satisfy the craving many people have for solitude and the beauty of untrammelled lands and waters.

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