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Wilderness "Hot Spots" See Increasing Crowds

National Forest officials are considering an update of a management plan for the Maroon Bells/Snowmass Wilderness. The outdated plan didn't account for the crowds the area saw this summer.
Marci Krivonen
National Forest officials are considering an update of a management plan for the Maroon Bells/Snowmass Wilderness. The outdated plan didn't account for the crowds the area saw this summer.
National Forest officials are considering an update of a management plan for the Maroon Bells/Snowmass Wilderness. The outdated plan didn't account for the crowds the area saw this summer.
Credit Marci Krivonen
National Forest officials are considering an update of a management plan for the Maroon Bells/Snowmass Wilderness. The outdated plan didn't account for the crowds the area saw this summer.

The Forest Service is beginning the discussion about how to deal with increasing problems with crowds in the Maroon Bells Snowmass Wilderness. This summer saw huge numbers of visitors at popular spots like Crater Lake and the Four Pass Loop. As Aspen Public Radio’s Marci Krivonen reports, forest service officials are working to educate the public before exploring solutions.

Rangers in the AspenSoprisRanger District released ayoutubevideo in October detailing the problems they saw this summer.

Video: "The Maroon BellsSnowmassWilderness is experiencing a degradation of character. Elevated amounts of visitation are causing wilderness crowding."

Photos in the video show rangers repairing illegal campfire sites and removing trash. This summer they pulled 640 pounds of garbage out of the wilderness area and buried 168 piles of human feces.

Credit Marci Krivonen

The number of people visiting popular areas is climbing. Crater Lake saw a 26 percent increase in visitation from the year before. Rangers counted 54,000 people on the trail over four summer months. That’s an average of 362 visitors per day. Andrew Larson is the Lead Wilderness Ranger on the Aspen/SoprisRanger District.

"The use is increasing in a few key places. Some places are getting more and more popular and drawing bigger crowds, while other places are kind of being forgotten about."

Other popular spots include the Aspen to Crested Butte hike, the Four Pass Loop,SnowmassLake, Capitol Lake and Conundrum Hot Springs.

I caught up to Ranger Intern Noah Teller and his colleagues at the Conundrum Hot Springs trailhead this summer. A storage container was full of garbage.

A group of rangers does repair and clean up work at the trailhead for Conundrum Hot Springs.
Credit Marci Krivonen
A group of rangers does repair and clean up work at the trailhead for Conundrum Hot Springs.

"Not only is this a hassle to pack out, but it’s dangerous. If we leave food soiled trash in here in a non-secure canister, bears can become accustomed to hanging out at the trailhead and other wildlife can eat the plastic and get hurt by it. It’s no good."

The rangers think people are flocking to these places partly because of publicity. Whatever the reason, the numbers are growing and Forest Service officials are looking for solutions.

Lead Ranger Andrew Larson says the document that guides management in the Maroon Bells/SnowmassWilderness is nearly 30 years old and needs an update.

"The last management plan did not anticipate the increased visitation that we’re getting right now. So, we need to update our look at how we’re meeting the intent of the Wilderness Act, which is to keep wilderness wild. I feel like we’re failing in a few ways, in a few places right now."

The problem is the Forest Service operates on a tight budget with a thin staff and, a reworked plan with public input and environmental review would take lots of staff time. So for now, the Forest Service is working on educating people through things like online videos.

"We want to show the public the issues we’re dealing with. And once the public’s aware of the challenges and issues we’re facing, we want to see how the public would feel about some management changes," Larson says.

Larson thinks the conversation about updating the plan will start this winter.

Copyright 2014 Aspen Public Radio

Originally from Montana, Marci grew up near the mountains and can't get enough of them. She began in broadcasting in Missoula, Montana where she anchored Montana Public Radio's local Evening Edition news program. She then picked up a camera and tripod and worked for Missoula's local CBS television station as a reporter. Shortly after that, she returned to radio and became the Assistant News Director at a radio station in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Marci began at Aspen Public Radio in 2007 as the station's morning host and reporter. Although you can occasionally hear Marci in the mornings, she is now quite content to be sleeping in and reporting all day. When not at the station, Marci is on her road bike, meeting people, or skiing.
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