I haven't been all that active for a number of years here just because I live much further from the Pines than I used to. I've been following this whole situation with dismay and honestly, if it weren't for this site, I would have never known about this at all-it's been years since I've been to Wharton, and the last time I really did any driving in the pines was in Bass River two summers ago. This is really a kick in the gut for me as I've just started looking at converting my 1991 Toyota single cab into a 4Runner so that I can cart around my two daughters off road once they get a little older to the different places I knew as a kid, just like the author of the article Guy posted. I really wonder how much of the pines will be accessible by then, and if even my oldest (she is four now) will get her first experience behind the wheel, as I did, on an old sand road.
One only needs to look to my backyard, (Stokes State Forest, High Point State Park, Worthington State Forest, and the Delaware Water Gap NRA) to see what the Division of Parks and Forestry has done over time. The first 500 acres of land for Stokes State Forest was donated by Governor Edward Stokes in 1907-the forest eventually expanded to 16,000 acres by the 1930s. Even when you lump in High Point State Park, Worthington, and the Gap, it still only amounts to about 3/4 of the size of Whartons 115,000 acres, but the fact remains that the roads, farms, homesteads, logging and mining operations of the area have a history that predates the Revolution, and reaches back to the earliest explorers of Colonial New Jersey. Logging, fire, and mining roads crisscrossed the area for hundreds of years prior the acquisition of Stokes, but over the last 100 years or so they have been closed off so that only a few remain-they just use boulders the size of cattle instead of logs. This is to say nothing of the aggressive road closures presided over by the National Park Service (they've even gated off paved roads) in the comparatively short amount of time they have managed the DWG NRA. Honestly though, what really burns me up is the support (albeit anecdotal) I've seen among some hunters for these closures. I participated in a thread about the closures on a popular NJ Hunting forum and was unpleasantly surprised at the view of more than a few hunters who think the closures are a good thing.