I have a soft spot for Enduro riders. They really hurt nothing as long as they don't make trails through sensitive wetlands, which they don't. If you see that guy again, ask him what makes more trails and deeper trails; enduro Riders or fire breaks.According to them, the current DEP head "gave them free rein to turn Brendan Byrne into a dirt bike park."
He said Enduro riders make "secret trails" in the middle of the forest using chainsaws, and make new "single tracks" for every race.
Is there any truth to this? I know Enduro riders have used the Pine Barrens for decades, and were allowed to use it after the Preserve was made. I've seen dirt bikers here and there but I have never seen an Enduro race or any tracks like they are mentioning.
Is it the usual hyperbole or is there some truth?
Because the same guy was complaining that Jeeps drove over the gravel piles near Friendship. Sneering about it. "they say it's FUN!"
I really don't get people. This same person puts on waders to go through bogs for photos. He probably thinks that is fun.
I don't get why some people just can't say "to each their own." ...
Driving over a gravel pile may be goofy, but it's not killing any wildlife. I wonder if these people think actually think endangered salamanders live in the sand pits at Funtown? Or if they just think all offroaders are stereotypical rednecks and hate them for that.
They once called a mud puddle (created by off-roading, ironically) a vernal pool for the same reason.I don't think reason enters into it. They have a visceral dislike for motorized vehicles. The fix our parks members were going after electric bikes on rail trails!
I'm not against Enduro bikers at all.
They are trying to call sand pits like Funtown "paleo dunes" now to generate outrage.
In 1970 hydrogeologist Rhodehamel estimated that about 2% of the Pine Barrens was then occupied by spungs, and their extant has decreased since then due to degradation. Given their ecological and cultural importance, and a limited footprint, are true spungs expendable?They once called a mud puddle (created by off-roading, ironically) a vernal pool for the same reason.
Where is Funtown?
In 1970 hydrogeologist Rhodehamel estimated that about 2% of the Pine Barrens was then occupied by spungs, and their extant has decreased since then due to degradation. Given their ecological and cultural importance, and a limited footprint, are true spungs expendable?
Jessica and I got a good laugh today. We turned in off of Jackson road to go to Goshen and a man was using his remote controlled vehicle to drive on the dirt mounds. Jessica looked at me and said we now know who it was at Friendship.Because the same guy was complaining that Jeeps drove over the gravel piles near Friendship. Sneering about it. "they say it's FUN!"
Nope.In 1970 hydrogeologist Rhodehamel estimated that about 2% of the Pine Barrens was then occupied by spungs, and their extant has decreased since then due to degradation. Given their ecological and cultural importance, and a limited footprint, are true spungs expendable?
That's because Enduro club the ppa and njcf were in meetings with dep this is where this new plan came from.welcome to nj I give to get what I want...I was talking to some birders and photographers at Friendship, who were angry about the DEP Teams meeting.
According to them, the current DEP head "gave them free rein to turn Brendan Byrne into a dirt bike park."
He said Enduro riders make "secret trails" in the middle of the forest using chainsaws, and make new "single tracks" for every race.
Is there any truth to this? I know Enduro riders have used the Pine Barrens for decades, and were allowed to use it after the Preserve was made. I've seen dirt bikers here and there but I have never seen an Enduro race or any tracks like they are mentioning.
Is it the usual hyperbole or is there some truth?
Because the same guy was complaining that Jeeps drove over the gravel piles near Friendship. Sneering about it. "they say it's FUN!"
I really don't get people. This same person puts on waders to go through bogs for photos. He probably thinks that is fun.
I don't get why some people just can't say "to each their own." ...
Driving over a gravel pile may be goofy, but it's not killing any wildlife. I wonder if these people think actually think endangered salamanders live in the sand pits at Funtown? Or if they just think all offroaders are stereotypical rednecks and hate them for that.
I was in Brendan Byrne Sunday morning, and was hearing what sounded like bikes, loud and fairly near. I was parked at an intersection of two roads, and figured they'd be coming through, but they didn't - they just sounded like they were going back and forth in a small area. Looking on my gps where it sounded like they were, it appeared they were in the woods nowhere near an existing road. Of course, sound in the woods may not always come from where you think.I was talking to some birders and photographers at Friendship, who were angry about the DEP Teams meeting.
According to them, the current DEP head "gave them free rein to turn Brendan Byrne into a dirt bike park."
He said Enduro riders make "secret trails" in the middle of the forest using chainsaws, and make new "single tracks" for every race.
Is there any truth to this? I know Enduro riders have used the Pine Barrens for decades, and were allowed to use it after the Preserve was made. I've seen dirt bikers here and there but I have never seen an Enduro race or any tracks like they are mentioning.
Is it the usual hyperbole or is there some truth?
Because the same guy was complaining that Jeeps drove over the gravel piles near Friendship. Sneering about it. "they say it's FUN!"
I really don't get people. This same person puts on waders to go through bogs for photos. He probably thinks that is fun.
I don't get why some people just can't say "to each their own." ...
Driving over a gravel pile may be goofy, but it's not killing any wildlife. I wonder if these people think actually think endangered salamanders live in the sand pits at Funtown? Or if they just think all offroaders are stereotypical rednecks and hate them for that.
Now that I have been told where Funtown is, it is not in Brendan. Not trying to be a smart-ass but where else would atv's and dirt bikes be if not in a sand pit or on the roads? BTW, there are no legal trails for motorized use in any State Park. You meant roads, correct?I meant that someone who wades in bogs for fun has no business criticizing someone who wants to drive their vehicle over a dirt pile, is all. If neither are damaging the environment, I no problem with them. I was just out at Funtown today. We saw a lot of ATVs and dirt bikes in Brendan, but all were on trails or in the sand pit.
Sorry, I incorrectly call the named sandy roads “trails” and I have been corrected.Now that I have been told where Funtown is, it is not in Brendan. Not trying to be a smart-ass but where else would atv's and dirt bikes be if not in a sand pit or on the roads? BTW, there are no legal trails for motorized use in any State Park. You meant roads, correct?
Hey Tom, I admire your photos a lot. You raise an issue I've thought about quite a bit in the past 8 years.BTW, I've been a photographer and birder for many years, and have never put on waders to go through bogs, or anywhere else. I've known many others like myself over the years, and I can't think of any of them who weren't respectful of the environment they were in, or the wildlife. Like everything else, including offroaders, there are jerks who don't follow the rules. But I would hope I wouldn't be stereotyped any more than I would strereotype an offroader as a redneck
All the points you brought up I have thought about as well. I even take it a step further and often think what is the “best” thing for the pines? The best tool I can think of to get some insight on what the pine were like almost 100 years ago is the 1930’s aerials. When I look at them I see vast areas of sand. I can see where the the term pine barrens came from. I can also see how European settlement has touched every inch of todays pines. What we think of as remote today was once probably logged out and possibly farmed.Hey Tom, I admire your photos a lot. You raise an issue I've thought about quite a bit in the past 8 years.
I have walked along, and in, many streams in the Pine Barrens in knee boots, hip boots and chest waders. Most of the best photos I've taken have been in environmentally sensitive areas. For the most part, I explore the same areas that hunters frequent. I know this because I see deer feeders and stands all the time.
If there were 100,000 people walking on sphagnum moss, or into the Tulpehocken, or into the Oswego or Batsto or Mullica or Wading Rivers, down the flooded Road at Deep Run, those areas would be destroyed. But there aren't that many people doing it. Am I acting illegally or unethically?
Hunters trap beaver, kill deer, coyote, turkey, etc. Are they destroying the environment?
If you or I are taking photos of heron or snowy owl and they fly away because they see us, we have disturbed them in their natural environment. Is it illegal? Is it ethical?
If someone drives a 4x4 into a spung, or a river, or goes muddding on legal roads and tears them up and makes the holes deeper, or makes doughnut tire ruts, is it legal or unethical?
If you or I drive down Railroad Ave and use an established go-around, is that illegal?
I know a lot of landscape photographers, and they all walk into savannah, leave roads and trails and walk into the woods, cross cedar swamps. Are we breaking the law? Are we acting unethically? Many use drones, (on this one issue I am clear because drones are 100% illegal in state parks).
It is a complicated issue.