USFS: ‘Partners make progress in restoring Grandfather Ranger District’

Release Date: Dec 16, 2014

Contact(s): Stevin Westcott, (828) 257-4215

NEBO, N.C., Dec. 16, 2014The U.S. Forest Service and a spectrum of partners collaborated to help restore close to 6,000 acres in the Grandfather Ranger District, Pisgah National Forest, through the Grandfather Restoration Project over the past year.

“I commend our partners for their ongoing hard work and dedication to the Grandfather Restoration Project,” said Grandfather District Ranger Nick Larson. “This year’s accomplishments illustrate the power of leveraged resources and how great things can be achieved when diverse partners collaborate in a single landscape.”

Lisa Jennings, program coordinator of the Grandfather Restoration Project, assists in conducting a prescribed burn on the Grandfather Ranger District. (photo courtesy Adam Warwick, The Nature Conservancy)[Photo: Lisa Jennings, program coordinator of the Grandfather Restoration Project, assists in conducting a prescribed burn on the Grandfather Ranger District. (photo courtesy Adam Warwick, The Nature Conservancy)]

The Grandfather Restoration Project is a 10-year effort that increases prescribed burning and other management practices on 40,000 acres of the Grandfather Ranger District. The project is restoring the fire-adapted forest ecosystems, benefiting a variety of native plants and wildlife, increasing stream health, controlling non-native species and protecting hemlocks against hemlock woolly adelgids. The project is one of 10 projects announced by Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack in February 2012, under the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration program.

In fiscal year 2014, the Grandfather Restoration Project established forest vegetation on 44 acres, improved forest vegetation on 339 acres, restored or enhanced 5,345 acres of terrestrial habitat and 2.5 miles of stream habitat. The Project also treated for invasive species on 135 acres, restored watershed health on two acres, maintained or improved 50 miles of trails, and reduced hazardous fuels on 3,439 acres.

Project partners provided the following contributions in fiscal year 2014:

  • The N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission improved early successional habitat (young forests) by mowing 648 acres, treating 44 acres of invasive species, conducting 13 different surveys for land and water species, stocking 3,000 brown trout , clearing 1.5 miles of fire break, performing prescribed burning on adjacent lands, and collecting data on black bears.
  • The Wilderness Society provided 672 hours studying the fire ecology of the Linville Gorge, 20 hours on shortleaf pine restoration planning, and 651 hours on a variety of trail work.
  • The N.C. Forest Service assisted with prescribed burns on the Grandfather Ranger District and conducted burns on adjacent private lands.
  • Western North Carolina Alliance provided 39 hours for shortleaf pine restoration project development, 48 hours in vegetation monitoring and 50 hours in invasive species monitoring.
  • The Nature Conservancy spent 26 hours assisting with prescribed burns, 40 hours on public outreach, and 97 hours on project development for shortleaf pine restoration.
  • Wild South volunteers spent 600 hours removing, by hand, non-native species in the Linville Gorge Wilderness.
  • N.C. Department of Transportation provided funding for bridge replacement at Catawba Falls recreation area.

A critical component of the Grandfather Restoration Project is monitoring the effectiveness of restoration management practices. Partners monitor all aspects of the project, from prescribed burning to invasive species treatment effectiveness. Monitoring efforts following prescribed burns show a 90 percent reduction in evergreen shrub cover (hazardous fuels), as well as an increase in wildlife use and diversity. Invasive species monitoring shows 70 percent average effectiveness in killing target plant species during initial treatments.

“The Grandfather Ranger District and its partners are making great progress toward our restoration goals, treating more than 18,000 acres since the start of the project,” said Larson.

Additional partners involved in the project include: Foothills Conservancy, Southern Blue Ridge Fire Learning Network, North Carolina Department of Natural Resources, Land of Sky Regional Council, National Wild Turkey Federation, Southern Research Station, National Park Service, Appalachian Designs, Western Carolina University, Trout Unlimited, Fish and Wildlife Service, Friends of Wilson Creek, Forest Stewards, Quality Deer Management Association, and the Grandfather Mountain Stewardship Foundation.

 

Get Your Tickets NOW! ‘The Spirit of John Muir’ and ‘The Tramp & The Roughrider’

Plenty of tickets are still available! Get yours today online or buy them at the door. Tickets are $37.50

*Free tickets are available for volunteers, click here to sign up!

Buy tickets for both shows HERE or order over the phone with Sara at 828-258-8737 ext. 201

MountainTrue presents two live shows celebrating the life and adventures of John Muir, an early advocate of preservation of wilderness in the United States. His letters, essays, and books telling of his adventures in nature, especially in the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, have been read by millions. The Muir shows have also toured throughout the country to universities, parks, museums, wilderness and environmental organizations from Washington D.C. to Hawaii. 

7:30 p.m., Jan. 23: The Tramp & The Roughrider 2015JohnMuir_PostcardB2sm

 Flat Rock Playhouse

MoutainTrue invites you to journey back to May 1903 to an evening around the campfire in Yosemite Valley with America’s best known conservationist, John Muir, and President Theodore Roosevelt. Hear them spar over environmental and wilderness issues and witness the conversation that helped lead Roosevelt to establish 200 million acres of wilderness, five new national parks, and 55 wildlife preserves during his tenure.

 

2015JohnMuir_PostcardF3sm7:30 p.m., Jan. 27: The Spirit of John Muir

Asheville Community Theatre 
This show is  a fun romp through some of the very best of Muir’s grand, thrilling adventures in his beloved western wilderness. “The Perilous Night on Mount Shasta,” with Muir freezing in the midst of a howling blizzard while simultaneously being boiled and blistered in hot springs, his astonishing ride down a Yosemite Valley canyon wall on a snow avalanche, and climbing the 500′ wall of the winter ice cone beneath the Yosemite Fall, encounters with a mighty Yosemite earthquake, dangerous Alaskan ice crevasses, snow blindness, and much more – these are only a few of the amazing (and true) adventures – all liberally salted with Muir’s wilderness philosophy. This show’s theme revolves around the health and invigoration one acquires when one fully and joyfully engages wildness. 

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WNCA submits comments on EPA’s ‘Clean Power Plan’

November 25, 2014
Re: Docket ID: EPA-HQ-OAR-2013-0602

Dear Administrator McCarthy:

On behalf of the members and board of the Western North Carolina Alliance (WNCA), I [Co-Director Julie Mayfield], submit these comments on the Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan Proposed Rule (CPP).

We fully support the CPP as a commonsense plan to address coal-fired power plants, the single largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States.

These rules are urgently needed to protect the planet as a whole and specifically the ecosystems,
communities and local economies of Western North Carolina.

Click here to download and read the full letter.

 

We are ‘MountainTrue’!

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At the Nov. 20 Annual Fall Gathering, the boards and members of WNCA, ECO and Jackson-Macon Conservation Alliance enthusiastically agreed to move forward as one united organization: MountainTrue. The merger and name change became official on Jan. 1.
 
We are very grateful to the more than 100 people who came to celebrate this historic moment with us and to all those who took part in the voting process that has allowed us to move forward as a larger, stronger regional organization. Together, we are committed to protecting the natural resources of North Carolina’s beautiful mountain communities.
Thank you for your support and membership!  
We look forward to many more years of partnership and success. And we pledge to always remain loyal to, devoted to, and protective of our mountains.

We are MountainTrue!

Dec. 13: Help the Hemlocks!

HemlocksOn Saturday, Dec. 13, WNCA’s Forest Keepers will plant hemlock trees with the Forest Service Southern Research Station.

Here in the mountains and and all over the east, a pest known as hemlock wooly adelgid has devastated hemlock stands. The research station recently received 800 hemlock saplings and they need our help planting them! These trees will inform ongoing research about how to defend the hemlocks against the adelgid and will be part of a major hemlock restoration effort. We have the honor to part of the solution for these beloved trees.

We will plant from 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. and you can choose whether you would like to plant in the morning or afternoon. You can plant all day if you want to as well! We’ll meet at 9 a.m. at the Southern Research Station (200 W.T. Weaver Boulevard, Asheville) and will be back by 5 p.m.

DuPont is an hour drive south of Asheville, so morning planters should plan to be out from 9 a.m.-1 p.m., and likewise, afternoon planters will be out from 1- 5 p.m. We’ll change shifts at lunchtime.

Please bring a shovel and work gloves if you have them. No tree planting experience necessary! You will need to bring lunch, two liters of water, hiking boots, and please dress in layers. Winter seems to have already arrived! If you have any questions, email Alexandra@WNCA.org.

Click [HERE] to register!

Dec. 11: Upcycle Your Holiday!

December is a time for gifts of all kinds to be flying off the shelves in excitement and good intention.  The unfortunate reality of the season, is that the rapid flux of items out of stores is balanced by a rapid flux of items into a pile outside of our own city.  It takes some conscientious thinking, but anyone can get a smarter, more creative, more unique gifter.

Join WNCA on Thursday, Dec. 11 for a tour designed for rethinking seasonal consumerism. We will get a visual of the amount of waste we create as a community at the landfill and recycling center, and finish at Common Ground Upcycle Emporium and Resource Center, where we will learn about our options in keeping our goods out of the landfill, and in creating new treasures for our friends and family. There will be a chance to shop for gifts at the end of the tour.

Please wear warm clothing, and bring water and snacks if you wish. Homemade granola bars will be provided. We will begin at 10:00AM and end around 1:00PM. This tour is FREE and ALL AGES are welcome. Registration is required at tinyurl.com/UpcycleYourHoliday. Contact: Rachel Stevens (843) 258-8737, rachel@wnca.org

 

Dec. 7: What Fir! Tree Farm Tour

Join the WNC Alliance on Sunday, Dec. 7 for a tour of  a truly green Christmas tree farm, What Fir! Tree Farm.

We’ll meet at the What Fir! Tree Farm at 11 a.m., and owner Nathaniel Maram will take us on a tour of the farm and share a history of its transition to natural growing practices.

The What Fir! Tree Farm offers the option to buy a Christmas tree grown without the use of synthesized chemicals. What Fir! has not used any pesticides or herbicides for five years, and the abundance of Fraser Firs on the tree farm are evidence of the success of organic farming practices.

What Fir! is located on 50 acres outside Boone. Visiting the farm can be a great day-long event that includes choosing your own tree, taking a hayride, hiking, sledding, shopping for wreaths and other Christmas decorations, and enjoying a cup of warm cider.

Wear warm clothes and bring equipment needed for you to bring a tree home if desired!

Free! All Ages!

Carpool from Asheville: 9 a.m. Earth Fare at the Westgate Shopping Center

RSVP: tinyurl.com/WhatFir

Contact: Rachel Stevens at rachel@wnca.org or by calling (828) 258-8737, ext 215.

Dec. 4: New Mountain Climate Bash

Join us on Dec. 4 for the “New Mountain Climate Bash” at New Mountain Asheville!

This bash celebrates both local music and Asheville Beyond Coal’s efforts to fight climate disruption and to stop the poisoning of our rivers from toxic coal ash. 

Line-up includes:

Alex Krug of Alex Krug music
CaroMia
Chelsea LaBate of Ten Cent Poetry
Daniel Shearin of Daniel Shearin Music
Dulci Ellenberger of Sweet Claudette
Eleanor Underhill and Molly Rose of Underhill Rose
Eric Janoski of Mother Explosives
Franklin Keel, Ryan Kijanka, and Gabrielle Tee of The Scenic Routes
Jon Stickley of the Jon Stickley Trio
Mary Ellen Davis
Pancho Romero Bond, Xavier Ferdon, and Franklin Keel of Sirius.B
Ryan Furstenburg & Melissa Hyman of The Moon and You
Stephanie Morgan of stephaniesid

Doors open at 7 p.m..

Tickets are $8 in advance, $10 at the door, plus $5 student tickets with ID at the door.

All proceeds will benefit Asheville Beyond Coal’s efforts to protect our mountains and planet!

Click here for more info!

 

Merger documents approved by members

 

 

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At the joint annual gathering on Nov. 20 of Environmental and Conservation Organization, Jackson-Macon Conservation Alliance, members took the final votes to make our merger as MountainTrue legally effective. 

 The documents approved were the following:

–          The Merger Resolution, which states the approval of the boards and memberships to merge.  This will also contain the list of board members for the merged organization once that list is approved at the annual gathering.

–          The Plan of Merger, which states that the separate existence of each organization will cease as of Dec. 31, at 11:59 p.m.  The surviving corporation will be WNCA’s corporate form.

–          Restated Articles of Incorporation that will become effective immediately after the merger and change the name of the surviving corporation.

–          The Bylaws of the newly merged organization.

All of these documents will be filed with the North Carolina Secretary of State’s office after the annual gathering, along with required cover forms for the Plan of Merger and the Restated Articles of Incorporation.

If you have any questions about the documents or the merger, please contact WNCA Co-Director Julie Mayfield at Julie@WNCA.org.

 

U.S.F.S. proposes opening most of Pisgah-Nantahala National Forest to logging

logging meme

12/13/2014: “WNC’s National Forests at crossroads” — Editorial by Public Lands Field Biologist Josh Kelly in the Asheville Citizen-Times. (May require login).

Press Release from the Southern Environmental Law Center
For Release: Nov. 12, 2014
Contact: Kathleen Sullivan, SELC, 919-945-7106 or ksullivan@selcnc.org

Forest Service proposes massive logging program in an area bigger than the Great Smoky Mountains National Park

CHAPEL HILL, N.C.—In what conservation groups flag as a dramatic shift, the U.S. Forest Service is proposing industrial-scale logging in the vast majority of the Pisgah-Nantahala National Forest in western North Carolina – about 700,000 acres, or an area bigger than the Great Smoky Mountain National Park – instead of protecting popular backcountry recreation destinations and conserving the Blue Ridge landscapes treasured by residents and tourists from across the United States.

“Under the law and for everyone who enjoys America’s forests, the Forest Service’s first priority should be fixing the mistakes of the past – restoring the parts of the forest already damaged by prior logging,” said DJ Gerken, senior attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center. “But the misguided logging plan proposed by the agency will repeat those old mistakes, causing more damage and putting the healthiest forests we have left on the chopping block. The people who use and love these forests won’t stand for cutting them down.”

The Forest’s new proposal would inevitably increase logging over the levels of recent years, though the precise amount has not been disclosed. “This increase would come from ramping up logging all over the forest, including backcountry areas like the South Mills River area, home to the popular Black Mountain Trail,” said Hugh Irwin, conservation planner for The Wilderness Society. According to Forest Service documents, such areas would be managed for “timber production,” which it interprets as “the purposeful growing and harvesting of crops of trees to be cut into logs.”

This industrial-style logging would also require cutting new roads for trucks and equipment into sensitive, unspoiled backcountry areas. “Not only is that destructive and disruptive, it’s also fiscally irresponsible,” added Irwin. “The agency shouldn’t be expanding its road system when it can’t even afford to maintain the roads it already has.” Agency reports confirm that the Forest has less than 13 percent of the funds needed to maintain its existing roads, leading to safety and water quality problems. Several popular roads remain closed due to unrepaired washouts.

“This proposal is absolutely the wrong direction for the forest,” said Ben Prater, director of conservation for Wild South. “Times have changed, and our mountain economy doesn’t depend just on logging anymore. We should be capitalizing on our wonderful Blue Ridge forests, not cutting them down. Treating practically the entire Pisgah-Nantahala as a ‘crop’ is simply irresponsible.”

The Pisgah-Nantahala National Forest has become a tourism and recreation destination, and revenue generated by visitors is a major driver of the western North Carolina economy. The National Forests of North Carolina are the third most visited national forest in the country. Industrial logging not only damages scenery and natural features, which are the key draw for half of those visits, but also requires popular areas to be closed to the public for months at a time while trees are being cut. “They’re our public lands,” says Prater. “Where is the balance?”

Josh Kelly, public lands biologist for the Western North Carolina Alliance, calls the proposal a “missed opportunity.” According to Kelly, “the Forest Service could sell more timber, meet game wildlife goals for hunters, and fulfill its ecological responsibilities by focusing its limited budget on restoring degraded areas with existing road access. We have a historic opportunity to care for this forest like it deserves – a real win-win solution – but if the Plan is mired in conflict, none of that work will get done.”

Public participation is important to the planning process underway, in which the U.S. Forest Service will decide how to manage the Pisgah and National Forests for the next 15 years.

TAKE ACTION TO STOP THIS PROPOSAL BY CLICKING HERE NOW!

The public can also comment by email at NCplanrevision@fs.fed.us.

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The Southern Environmental Law Center is a regional nonprofit using the power of the law to protect the health and environment of the Southeast (Virginia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama). Founded in 1986, SELC’s team of more than 60 legal and policy experts represent more than 100 partner groups on issues of climate change and energy, air and water quality, forests, the coast and wetlands, transportation, and land use.
www.SouthernEnvironment.org