'National Trails Day' brings 100 volunteers to Canfield Mountain
BILL BULEY | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 hours, 23 minutes AGO
Bill Buley covers the city of Coeur d'Alene for the Coeur d’Alene Press. He has worked here since January 2020, after spending seven years on Kauai as editor-in-chief of The Garden Island newspaper. He enjoys running. | June 11, 2026 1:00 AM
Peter Schuler and Gordon Hamerski were riding dirt bikes on Canfield Mountain on Saturday morning when they saw something that made them stop: Branches and brush protruding into the trail.
In a few minutes, they cut them back, tossed them to the side and prepared to move on.
“When you’re hiking, the little things are not a big deal,” said Schuler, with the Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation. “But when you’re riding and you’re higher up, those little sticks can become face whippers. They can actually hurt pretty bad.”
Hamerski, with the Forest Service in Sandpoint, said when it comes to maintaining trails used by bikers, the general rule is, anything you can reach with a tool or hand should be cut back.
“We’re trying to get over the big headaches that would whip us in the face,” he said.
The two men were among about 100 volunteers who came out for National Trails Day. Bikers, hikers, hunters, backcountry clubs, conservation groups and horsemen spent several hours clearing branches and brush from trails on Canfield Mountain starting at the trailhead across from the Fernan gun range on Fernan Lake Road.
The event was organized by the Northern Rockies Trail Project, a new nonprofit based in Sandpoint formed to bring trail users together around the shared goal of keeping public lands accessible and healthy through collaboration and hands-on stewardship.
NRTP’s approach is simple: collaborate early, build trust and get work done.
“When user groups come together on the front end, land managers get better partners, projects move faster and there’s less conflict later,” said NRTP board chair Emily Strizich. “Everyone benefits — especially the land.”
Strizich said events like National Trails Day create a culture of stewardship, “where people get involved.”
“Improved access protects wild places in more than one way,” says Strizich. “The more people can get out and experience these places, the more they understand what they’re protecting.”
Heather Cox with the Northern Rockies Trail said volunteer efforts help keep Canfield trails open, as they are used by many.
“They run the risk of closing themselves if they don’t get maintained,” she said.
Tom Dabrowski with the Idaho Trails Association has put in 250 days of trail work as a volunteer and was a crew leader Saturday for a group that hiked more than a mile up a trail.
“We do this because it’s the right thing to do,” he said, smiling. “And it beats the hell out of watching TV."
Dirt biker Jeremy Jones appreciated the volunteers. He said Canfield's trails are world-class and he loves seeing them in such great condition.
“Very beneficial,” he said.
Jim Manning of Hayden is with the Idaho Trails Association and was a crew leader Saturday.
“I love the physical challenge of being on the trails,” he said. “And the trail work, mostly because of the other people. I’ve basically met nothing but good people.”
Volunteer Ben Nachlas used loppers to cut back branches in a trail section.
“Protecting these wild places is the most important thing,” he said. “It brings me joy to devote my time to maintaining and upkeeping the things I love. And doing it alongside of my community, that’s what it’s all about.”
ARTICLES BY BILL BULEY
'National Trails Day' brings 100 volunteers to Canfield Mountain
'National Trails Day' brings 100 volunteers to Canfield Mountain
NRTP grew out of the stewardship work of Pend Oreille Pedalers, a long-standing Sandpoint nonprofit known for building and maintaining bike trails in the Idaho Panhandle. But as that work expanded, so did a realization.
'National Trails Day' brings 100 volunteers to Canfield Mountain
'National Trails Day' brings 100 volunteers to Canfield Mountain
NRTP grew out of the stewardship work of Pend Oreille Pedalers, a long-standing Sandpoint nonprofit known for building and maintaining bike trails in the Idaho Panhandle. But as that work expanded, so did a realization.
Song, dance, unity highlights of Pride in the Park
Song, dance, unity highlights of Pride in the Park
Rena Herndobler worked at a booth selling Pride banners and stickers. She said Pride in the Park grows each year, which she saw as a sign of increasing attitudes of acceptance in the region.




