Prickly Pear Land Trust, with the support of the Dowling family, have re-opened a popular South Hills trail that had been temporarily closed due to access issues
“It’s a really, really big deal,” Prickly Pear Land Trust Executive Director Mary Hollow said. “It secured forever public access on one of the most popular trails in the system.”
Hollow said a portion of the Eddye McClure East trail was built on private property at least a decade ago with permission from the landowner at the time, but a “No Trespassing” sign was posted at the nearby Martinez Gulch parking area after the land was sold over the summer.
Mike Dowling said he purchased the property with his two daughters and their husbands. Dowling said they posted the signs at the recommendation of their attorney, who warned that they could be liable if someone were to get hurt on their land.
However, Dowling said the easement resolves this issue by protecting the landowners from liability and keeping the trail open to the public, which has been their goal all along. “When we all were looking at that piece of property, we all agreed without hesitation that we wanted to maintain access to the trail system,” he said.
A recent photo essay in the Bozeman Daily Chronicle titled “Seasonal Shift: Moving cows on the edge of Bozeman” includes a photo of a cow grazing at the Highland Glen Preserve, near a Gallatin Valley Land Trust trail. The photo essay documents some of the challenges of raising cattle within a partially urbanized area. The photos and article are by Samuel Wilson.
Kendall Van Dyk of The Montana Land Reliance (seen here) and Glenn Marx of Montana Association of Land Trusts were two of the presenters at a special Montana Sage Grouse Oversight Team (MSGOT) listening session on Oct. 14. The combination in-person and virtual meeting offered the public and sage grouse program stakeholders an opportunity to share thoughts with and recommendations to MSGOT as the program moves ahead under the Gianforte Administration. MSGOT members include department directors, legislators and the Montana Rangeland Resources Committee (within the DNRC).
Kendall focused his comments on specific items selected at the start of the listening session by MSGOT members. Those topics were: program customer service, program transparency, program efficiency and effectiveness, the program’s success in conserving sage grouse habitat, any potential weakness in the program’s ability to achieve its legislative purpose, the potential use of term leases to generate mitigation credits, and the potential for a unified front in the case Montana would need to seek policy or legal action to retain state authority. Roughly 15 people made presentations, many of them representing rural electric and telephone cooperatives.
MSGOT leadership indicated an interest in hearing more perspectives from sage grouse program participants in upcoming months. MLR, The Nature Conservancy in Montana and MALT have been consistently and actively involved in sage grouse conservation since before MSGOT’s creation.
The Nature Conservancy in Montana’s State Director, Amy Croover, was recently featured in anIndian Country Today News report on the transfer of the Safe Harbor Marsh to the Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes.
The edition of Indian Country Today News, on KCWC (PBS), aired in late September and covers several topics. Here is how the host of the show leads into TNC and Amy Croover: “…and in Montana, it’s more than just words (as) Amy Croover from the Nature Conservancy explains. She’s enrolled in the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska, and tells us of an important land transfer back to the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes.”
“It’s an incredible, inspiring thing that I am so grateful that I was able to be a part of,” said Croover. “The story is very long. The initial purchase of the land that’s located just off of the Flathead Lake, on the Flathead Indian Reservation in northwest Montana. It was purchased in 1989, and at the time The Nature Conservancy in Montana was very focused on biodiversity. And since then we’ve shifted more towards whole ecosystems. So we have this, you know, 132 acres of land, I think from the beginning there was always a hope that someday we could transfer it back to the tribes, the rightful stewards of this land.”
The Indian Country Today show host and Amy discuss a range of additional topics as well.
From the interview:
“…it helps us better understand what we should be restoring those lands to,” said Croover, “and a lot of that was coming from indigenous knowledge. But I would say it’s most important that we allow it to come from them, and so these are deep partnerships that we have built with both the Blackfeet Nation and the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes here in Montana, to learn from them, to partner with them and to better understand how we can help the allies in stewarding their lands.”
The Montana Association of Land Trusts was among a list of state, regional and national conservation organizations—including other MALT members—that signed on to a letter to US House and Senate leadership advocating the reconciliation bill retain major funding for forest conservation programs.
MALT members who also signed the letter included Prickly Pear Land Trust, The Conservation Fund, The Nature Conservancy and the Trust for Public Land.
The letter, sent earlier in October, highlights the value and success of the Forest Legacy Program, a program that has been instrumental in funding large forest conservation projects in northwest Montana. The reconciliation package—whose future in Congress is unclear—currently contains $40 billion in forest conservation funding, including $1.25 billion (over ten years) for the Forest Legacy Program. The bill also contains $100 million for the Community Forest and Open Space Program.
Final budget allocation numbers for the reconciliation bill are unsettled at this time, but increases in the Forest Legacy Program and Community Forest Program would be welcome forest conservation news for Montana. The Forest Legacy Program as been instrumental in conserving nearly 270,000 acres of western Montana forestlands, with multiple projects in the Montana Forest Legacy pipeline.
Over 50 volunteers joined Five Valleys Land Trust on National Public Lands Day to help build a portion of the House of Sky Trail, a new recreational trail in Missoula.
The 4.5-mile Mount Dean Stone trail is scheduled to open next year and will connect to the High, Wide and Handsome Trail in the Mount Dean Stone Corridor. It will be open for hikers, trail runners and mountain bikers.
The trail work was hosted by Mountain Bike Missoula (MTB Missoula), community members along with co-hosts from Five Valleys Land Trust, Montana Trail Crew, and Montana Conservation Corps.
Photo: Sherri Lee works on a new section of trail on Mount Dean Stone. Tom Bauer/Missoulian photo
Montana’s western forests face many threats, and among those threats is residential development on large tracts of privately held forestlands. An impressive Oct. 7 article in the Flathead Beacon—which includes perspectives from The Trust for Public Land, Stimson Lumber Company,Green Diamond Resource Company and Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks—documents the threats of development as well as the programs and cooperation needed to keep western Montana forestlands intact and producing wood products, maintaining public access and protecting wildlife habitat.
The article also points out additional funding for forestland conservation is in the much-debated reconciliation bill now before Congress.
Three quotes from the article:
“There’s no program in the history of fish and wildlife conservation in Montana that comes close to the Forest Legacy Program in terms of the impact it’s had on maintaining a working landscape, maintaining public recreation access, and protecting critical fish and wildlife connectivity,”said Jim Williams, regional supervisor for Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks in northwest Montana. “And we have been fortunate to work with willing timber companies as well as extremely knowledgeable land trust organizations that are the foremost experts on these partnerships.”
“There’s a saying that there are two income streams from forestry—income for today and value for tomorrow,” Neil Ewald, Green Diamond’s senior vice president and chief operating officer, said. “Well, we’re not desperate for income today. We don’t have any big notes to pay off. But we think we can maximize the value for the future.”
“These companies are being partially paid and they are partially donating the development rights of their timberland so they can move forward and say, ‘We don’t want the distraction of these unsolicited offers from developers.’ That’s critical. It’s because of those decisions that we are able to keep these working forests on the landscape, keep development pressures at bay and continue to allow public access,” said Chris Deming, senior project manager at The Trust for Public Land.
Between Oct. 8-18 Mountain Time Arts is celebrating Indigenous Peoples’ Day with illuminated teepees in Bozeman near the Gallatin Valley Land Trust trail system at Peets Hill. Lighting of the Teepees will honor the contributions of American Indians to our community, economy, culture, & history. They will be installed on the ancestral lands and traditional use area of the Bitterroot Salish, Pend d’Oreille, Kootenai, Blackfeet, Northern Cheyenne, Crow, Chippewa Cree, Assiniboine, Gros Ventre, Dakota, and other Indigenous nations of this region. For more information visit the Mountain Time Arts website.
The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation recently presented a series of awards to the major project partners that made the Elkhorn Mountains public acquisition project possible. The project closed earlier in September during an event in the Elkhorns attended by project partners, the media, and area outdoor organizations.
Seen here (left to right) are Mitch King, Executive Director of Montana’s Outdoor Legacy Foundation; Jeff Hagener, President of the MOLF Board of Directors; Mike Mueller, RMEF Senior Lands Program Manager; Joe Cohenour, Chairman of the RMEF Helena Elkhorn Chapter; Mike Welker, Helena-Lewis & Clark National Forest District Ranger; and John Hagengruber, USFS State Government Liaison. The 1,418-acre project transferred three parcels of land that were among the largest remaining private inholdings within the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest and the Helena-Lewis and Clark National Forest into accessible public ownership.RMEF Photo