The MAP is back

Status
Not open for further replies.

RednekF350

Piney
Feb 20, 2004
5,054
3,327
Pestletown, N.J.
Noon to 7:00 pm at Batsto Visitor Center on January 24.
A unique format. Stagger in at any time during those hours and talk to actual State employees who are affiliated with the map. No scheduled presentations.
 

enormiss

Explorer
Aug 18, 2015
607
409
Atco NJ
A Wednesday… Might take the time to pop in after work and see how it’s going LoL

Without time to look things over ahead of the opportunity to speak with them this sounds better.
In addition to the in-person open house, those interested in reviewing and commenting on the Wharton Visitor Vehicle Use Map and associated materials will also be able to view and submit comments online. An online public comment period will be available for 45 days, from Jan. 24 until Mar. 9, for those who are unable to attend in person.
 

bobpbx

Piney
Staff member
Oct 25, 2002
14,652
4,829
Pines; Bamber area
It would be great if they had the first map they wanted to change back in 2016(?) right next to the one they are proposing now, so one could see the difference.
Mark the 2016 roads that were designated open in yellow on that old map. On the newly proposed map, if any of the 2016 open ones stay yellow, keep them yellow. Also on the newly proposed map, if there are additional roads to be designated open, mark them in green. If there are any roads from the 2016 that were open, but are now proposed to be closed, leave the yellow on but cross them out in red "X"s every 1,000 feet.

Or some such. My point being that confusion will reign if you don't know where you came from and where you are going with the new plan.
 

harlequinhawk

New Member
Aug 31, 2009
28
22
51
As a writer and a self proclaimed Piney here is a piece I wrote on the subject back in May of 2021. Thought I'd share here. The new Map and the same old attitude is now what I see as the reason why the film I produced was banned from being screened at Batsto. You can search on YouTube and watch the film for free titled The Reluctant Piney.
*************************************

No matter if you like it or not change is in the air. With each passing breath, you breathe in things that are altered and out of your control. It's inevitable. There is a foreshadowing event occurring in the Pine Barrens that many believe will alter how we travel down many of the once-important highways of the Pines into the forgotten towns of yesterday. Good or bad or indifferent? This author likes some change then swears up and down about other changes for better or for worse, who knows. The coming changes the NJDEP is bringing to the Pine Barrens are likened to the event that changed the landscape of Texas and the American West- the introduction of barbed wire.

Many never leave the featured highways in this photo series. People from the East Coast crisscross the Pine Barrens using Routes; 72 and 539. They are unaware of the destination each side road that they pass has to offer them. Mystery, adventure, and places nowhere special yet worth getting lost in. It’s hard to describe to people who only know the Pine Barrens from traveling down those asphalt highways from point A to point B. There are remnants of ghost towns, squatter homes, unknown burial sites, abandoned hunting cabins, and many other strange and curious finds. The dirt itself if it could tell us all those that walked on by would astound. The native Americans on their way to-and-fro the Jersey shore, city people on stagecoaches heading to a halfway house for the night before making their way to a summer retreat, a quick-footed foxhound on the scent of prey and its owner chasing after, a Piney at sunset carrying the last full bag of pinecones on his back to finish loading the truck, nefarious humans doing illicit things in the pitch-black pinewoods like bootlegging and the list goes on and on.

Barbed wire in the West changed the landscape significantly. Access was denied to a once-open range. The ‘open range’ called many a young person to venture out West and start a life. The sense of adventure and freedom one had. That same call of the wild is what many seek in the Pine Barrens. You might not know it but it's at the root of why we love the Pine Barrens so much. The unfettered freedom of walking or driving down a road and seeing nobody for miles and miles. Just you and the Pines. One can easily slip into the boots of a cowboy out on the range with the feeling that the only law comes from within and that being a good neighbor is respected and expected. But like the few cowboys who went rogue taking the easy way out by stealing cattle and robbing stagecoaches we have a few in the Pine Barrens that when given that sense of unrestricted freedom take advantage. When that happens signs and gates go up. Then the signs and gates are ignored like the proverbial cowboy cutting barbed wire from the post on the range. Eventually, the law and society caught up to the lawless. The loss of the wild and unfettered access to the Pines is what is at stake today in the Pine Barrens. Maybe it's about time society caught up with the outlaw pineys. Or maybe those who travel the backwoods roads know more secrets about the Pines and love to see the folks on the tar roads traveling through point A to point B leaving them to the open range.
 

RednekF350

Piney
Feb 20, 2004
5,054
3,327
Pestletown, N.J.
By all means, be sure to go, especially if your message is that *your* convenience and *your* personal recreational preferences are more important to you than conservation.
The word conservation is used improperly in the context of your statement. I believe you would be much happier if this Map is strong on preservation.

From a National Park Service lesson plan entitled, Conservation vs Preservation and the National Park Service:
"Put simply conservation seeks the proper use of nature, while preservation seeks protection of nature from use."

Is it coincidence that the PPA stands for Pinelands Preservation Alliance ? I think not.
 

G. Russell Juelg

Explorer
Jul 31, 2006
284
51
Burlington County
Russell, I thought your position was more nuanced than this.
The nuance is right there in the conditional clause: "especially if your message is that *your* convenience and *your* personal recreational preferences are more important to you than conservation." I especially want people for whom that is true to go and express themselves. The real lack of nuance is expressed by those who don't want to acknowledge the ecological impacts of motorized recreation and just keep saying, "No road closures." A motorized access plan of any kind within a globally-important ecosystem is necessarily a compromise between protection of the ecosystem and convenience to visitors. The ideal state for the ecosystem would be zero motorized traffic. The ideal state for the visitors would be unrestrained access. This has all been articulated over and over again and repeated on the DEP site: https://www.nj.gov/dep/parksandforests/wharton/. "Data to create the Visitor Vehicle Use Map was gathered through an extensive stakeholdering process, during which more than 1,600 people submitted surveys, noting areas of interest and routes that were important to them. Additionally, DEP data on endangered, threatened and of conservation concern plant and animal species; wetlands; historic and cultural resources; and Natural Areas and Natural Heritage Priority Sites were taken into consideration during the Visitor Vehicle Use Map’s development."
 

G. Russell Juelg

Explorer
Jul 31, 2006
284
51
Burlington County
The word conservation is used improperly in the context of your statement. I believe you would be much happier if this Map is strong on preservation.

From a National Park Service lesson plan entitled, Conservation vs Preservation and the National Park Service:
"Put simply conservation seeks the proper use of nature, while preservation seeks protection of nature from use."

Is it coincidence that the PPA stands for Pinelands Preservation Alliance ? I think not.
I like doing word analysis, and I think you have a legitimate point in the distinction between conservation and preservation. The meanings of the two words, though, don't seem to me to be so cut and dried. One example would be the case of coastal plain intermittent ponds in the NJ pine barrens. I think they should be "preserved," in the sense that I don't want them to be lost or destroyed, but I certainly wouldn't want them to be "preserved" in the sense of being entirely removed from human use. The only issue is whether the use by humans is degrading them. And I think that holds for the pine barrens in general. The meaning of most any word varies with the context and the intent of the user. Pinelands Preservation Alliance wants the pine barrens preserved in the sense that its mission is to try to keep it from being lost or destroyed or damaged. The name certainly wasn't chosen to imply that it thinks the pine barrens should be removed entirely from human use. To understand that, you only have to look at the fact that PPA actively encourages outings in the pine barrens, including those that involve motorized travel.
 
Apr 6, 2004
3,620
564
Galloway
This has all been articulated over and over again...

Hi Russ. Thanks for the clarification. Indeed, this has been rehashed many times. Pardon me if you've detailed this before on this forum, but what exactly is the plan that you'd like to see implemented? Most here would agree that a balance needs to be struck between recreation and preservation.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top