Hi Patricia,
Thanks for your clarification. FWIW, here's mine.
The decision for opening or closing the trail rests in the hands of the Park Manager or the DNR staff person on duty. I am never asked for my opinion and I don't know if they take my assessment into consideration when I do leave word at the park.
The decision used to be based on the amount of water coming through a drainage channel at the entry kiosk. (Seriously, they did not look at the trails at all to make a decision.) Since that was rebuilt their trail open/close measurement device went away. Kevin asked me last year for another idea of what to use that was quick and convenient. I told him that a look at the trail immediately below the trail head was some of the worst (wettest) trail in the park, and was a fair representation of the other wet areas of the trail.
A fair set of questions about this process might be: Is this a good way to make decisions about opening the trails? Is there a better way to do it? If there is a better way, would it be practical for a staff that has many other things to attend to?
-If the decision to open the trails is based on the wettest sections of trail, that means there are dry sections of trail that could be ridden without damaging them. I haven't pushed this idea to the park manager because a)I can't think of a way that the trails can be ridden without hitting a stretch that is bad like the beginner section b) It creates a situation where the park personnel have to take it on faith that the trail riders will restrict their riding to the driest trail segments.
-Is there a better way to assess the condition of the trails than just looking at the trail right below the trail head? That's difficult to answer definitively without a lot of careful thought. I'm willing to admit that the this bit of trail isn't perfectly representative. Frankly it is pretty poor trail in terms of collecting water and being slow to dry. But so is the double track down into Over Lode, the far end of the beginner section, the beginning and end of Holy Schist, and quite a bit of Pokerville. Maybe I'm not pressing the park staff hard enough, but my guess is that if I don't give them a fairly quick and easy way to evaluate the trails, the job is going to get put to the back of their work queue and maybe not get done at all on a given day.
Your point about the trails being closed more under the new manager than under Karl Heil's management is correct I believe. It may not be in line with the practice at other trails in the area. However I'm not sure how we go from those observations to having the trail open more. The times that the subject has come up for discussion with Kevin Swenson, he has emphasized to me his determination to prevent damage to the trails, and his willingness to take criticism in order to do what is right.
You may feel that I'm not being aggressive enough in pushing to open the trails and it's possible you're right. All I can say is the weather situation in the first half of 2013 is the worst I've seen in 10 years at Blue Mound, and the one time I thought the staff were wrong and checked for myself,I concluded they were, in fact, correct. Was my decision based on not being willing to get my bike dirty? I think that was a pretty ridiculous proposition, but if you really want to know, a) I am not overly concerned with how clean my bike is b) I don't worry a whole lot how dirty your bike is c) I didn't have my bike with me that day regardless, I was there to work d) the park personnel (other than Kevin) to my knowledge would not use my opinion about the trails to determine trail status without direct orders from Kevin (I've tried (in 2012), and got nothing but hemming and hawing). e) I didn't check to see if Kevin was there that day to issue orders to override his standing orders because I was of the opinion that the trails should have been closed that day.
FWIW, I want to upgrade the trails to be more weather resistant and have worked steadily on this for years ( ie Home Stretch and Holy Schist reroutes). To say this generates little interest from the riding community is probably an understatement. "Like pulling teeth" is probably closer to the mark judging from the work day turnouts the last few years. At this time with our legal status still in limbo, it's a moot point anyway. Mostly.
Walt
PS I am of the opinion that the black soil in the most problematic trail areas is mostly leaf compost, and it has completely worthless mechanical properties when wet. Any comments from a soil science perspective?
Walt I think you hit the nail on the head for any management perspective. I know the same issues are present at Kettle except the wetter sections of trail are further out on the trail. Out there its very hard to ask someone to get out there to check the trail conditions (they mostly have to bike out) and to be honest I know for a fact that they just wait a bit after the rain and I don't think are actually really looking at the trail. and many times the "wet sections" are reported by me or a few friends that text me when they are out there....
I don't think there is a great answer, like you said without a lot of thought on how to evaluate trails for opening. Ideally there would be a way to indicate specific sections of trails being closed. Is that feasible? I don't know.
Personally I don't think there is anything wrong with not pushing the land managers to open the trail from your end. In my mind there is a better chance of them opening based on the number of the general public requesting the trails be open or inquiring as to their status.
From my experience I have found that many of the rangers don't really have experience with MTBs and trails and given the scope of their job its not always the priority. When I hang out at kettle the conversation always turns to the MTB trails, its easier to pick the brain of someone who isn't asking for something I guess.
I wonder if its possible to get the land manager to go up to the IMBA trail building school in August at 9 mile? It may be a shot in the dark but the DNR may consider it a training....I know some of the kettle peeps were looking at going up with me. Could help us out on a number of fronts considering the specific land manager training offered on Friday geared toward people in his position.
I feel you on the lack of interest in building and maintaining trails...obviously I'm a bit new but I find it really fun to do... Sadly the workdays for BM have been bad. I would like to offer my help whenever you need it. I live on the west side and can get out there easily. I was doing some work out at Kettle this weekend so was unable to attend. Even if you had a list of tasks someone could do on their own or with a few people I could work when others aren't around and report back to completed tasks. (maybe like they are doing at Cam Rock- I know I'd adopt a section of trail)
I'm not sure on the whole legal issue out there but it also may be something to run by some other DNR employees/rangers for guidance...What I can tell you the number one compliant kettle has is that the MTB group refuses to do anything that isn't related to MTB. Even so far as they wont go out and fix the other side of a sign for hikers when they fix the MTB side. So if we can offer help in any other areas we may begin to develop more good will?
For soil yes, compost materials or vegetative material in any capacity will slow drying. If I remember correctly the vast majority of soil out there is Dubuque Silt Loam which is well draining but has a water capacity of around .20 in/hour compared to the soil at camrock that is more like 1.8 in/hour. They called the entire north side of the mound Sandy Stone or Stony Sand and didn't have much for rates of absorption but I would anticipate that being capable of draining more water. I think a lot of the problem with that first section is that the water really doesn't have anywhere to drain, isn't able to get sunlight or wind so it stands until it can be absorbed.(reminds me of how soil stays wet in a corn field)
Don't know if this is possible but is there any way to put up some signage educating riders on how to ride through wet spots or when to get off and walk? I was a new rider who didn't know anyone who biked. A flyer in that kiosk would've educated me....
Anyway I would like to thank you and everyone else who puts in their time and effort into our trails! Hope you all have a great day!
Patricia