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Snowmobilers arrested for wilderness trespass
http://www.bozemandailychronicle.com...ustsbzbigs.txt
Snowmobilers arrested for wilderness trespass By SCOTT McMILLION, Chronicle Staff Writer Sometimes, it pays to read the signs. Three Minnesota snowmobilers drove their machines past the Absaroka Beartooth Wilderness Area boundary earlier this month, mired them in deep snow and had to hike out. Then they were fined $500 apiece and had to hired skilled riders to hike into the wilderness and retrieve their snowmobiles. The three men didn't claim any ignorance of the rules, according to Larry McKee, the Forest Service law enforcement specialist in Cooke City who cited the men. "They all kind of knew they messed up," McKee said Monday. All mechanized vehicles are banned in federal wilderness areas. "The boundary is well-posted," McKee said, adding that the three men were approximately 1.5 miles inside the wilderness. Their names have not been released. Incursions have dropped significantly since McKee began doing full-time patrols in the area two years ago, but they continue to occur. An education campaign also has helped cut the numbers. "We are concerned about incursions occurring this early in the winter season," said Ken Britton, Gardiner District Ranger on the Gallatin National Forest. McKee said the incident took place on Dec. 12, when the three Minnesotans did not return to Cooke City as scheduled. "There was a search put out for them at 9 o'clock because they didn't show up at night," McKee said. The three riders had driven to Lady of the Lake, rode down a hillside and were unable to climb back out, McKee said. They eventually started hiking -- there is about four feet of snow in the area -- and eventually hit a trail. A trail groomer found them about 3 a.m. and gave them a ride. Some of the searchers didn't get back to Cooke City until 6 a.m. "It was hard on the search teams, too," McKee said. The Forest Service determined the machines should be removed from the wilderness, McKee said, so the men hired locals, "some guys who can ride" to hike to the scene and drive them out. McKee said there have been six other incursions this winter, but these were the first citations of the year. He was recently granted a national award for his work in reducing wilderness incursions, which in the past have totaled hundreds of trips a year. |
Snowmobilers arrested for wilderness trespass
"Sportsmen Against Bush" wrote in message m... http://www.bozemandailychronicle.com...ustsbzbigs.txt Snowmobilers arrested for wilderness trespass McKee said there have been six other incursions this winter, but these were the first citations of the year. He was recently granted a national award for his work in reducing wilderness incursions, which in the past have totaled hundreds of trips a year. We used to have a National Forrest Ranger in CA who had a set of balls and stood up to the loggers and miners who thought they could get by with anything. His gutless boss wouldn't back him up and transferred him. Ernie |
Snowmobilers arrested for wilderness trespass
Couldn't happen at a better time. The snowmachiner/motorized
wreckreation community illustrating how much they respect closures and the law. Very nice blackeye they hit themselves with. Peace |
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