Forest opts for smaller salvage sale for Trail Creek
CHRIS PETERSON | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 8 years, 5 months AGO
Chris Peterson is the editor of the Hungry Horse News. He covers Columbia Falls, the Canyon, Glacier National Park and the Bob Marshall Wilderness. All told, about 4 million acres of the best parts of the planet. He can be reached at editor@hungryhorsenews.com or 406-892-2151. | August 2, 2016 2:55 PM
The Flathead National Forest has opted for the smaller alternative to salvage some of the trees that burned in the Trail Creek fire last summer.
In its draft decision released Monday, the Forest said it’s proposing to harvest 834 acres of burned and dead trees, which would result in about 4.3 million board feet of timber.
The project would construct 3.3 miles of new roads to be placed into storage at the project’s end, though it utilizes an old road template that’s been bermed and gated. The alternative does construct 1.6 miles of temporary roads.
The road would be closed to motorized use once the salvage is completed.
The bulk of the logging would be in the Bent and South Creek areas, just north of the Spotted Bear River, with a smaller unit near Big Bill.
Several of the units were already slated for logging under the Spotted Bear River project of 2011, noted project leader Matt Shaffer.
The Trail Creek Fire burned about 22,195 acres last summer and was one of the biggest fires in the state.
It burned largely in an unroaded area north of the Spotted Bear River and in the Great Bear Wilderness, where logging is not allowed.
The sale amounts to less than 4 percent of the fire area.
A final decision on the project is expected in November.
ARTICLES BY CHRIS PETERSON
Construction will limit access to Many Glacier in Glacier National Park this summer
Access into the Many Glacier Valley in Glacier National Park will be restricted this summer to about 120 groups a day, as the Park Service upgrades the infrastructure in the Swiftcurrent Valley.
Developer moves to purchase CFAC site following EPA's cleanup decision
The Environmental Protection Agency Friday released its record of decision for cleaning up the defunct Columbia Falls Aluminum Co plant, which paves the way for Columbia Falls developer Mick Ruis to buy most of the property, save for the landfills themselves.
Cats drop Hamilton in first home game
The nice thing about the Columbia Falls boys basketball team is this: Any player with the ball in his hands can score.