Home subscribe manage Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue

Sports


IN THE OUTDOORS: Taking public land from hunters stirs local consternation

How would you feel if you went into a grocery store and found most of the aisles where your favorite foods are found are off limits to all but a select group? What if you are forbidden to get close to those foods because you don't meet the store's new and narrow definition of a customer? Or what if you are allowed to shop in those aisles, but you have to carry everything in your hands or on your back because shopping carts are forbidden?

I suppose it wouldn't be so bad if they allowed pack horses in those special aisles, but then you would have to be one of the few who could afford either to own horses or pay a shopping guide to pack you in. Unfortunately, most of us don't fall into either category.

Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

Most Popular Stories
  • ED GRANEY: Sanford, LV Bowl have calls to make
  • 'WE DESTROYED THOSE GUYS': Cal humbles Rebels at home
  • UNHAPPY AT HOME: Rebels on losing streak
  • Pacquiao hungry to make statement
  • UNLV BASKETBALL: Rebels shoot for more fans
  • ED GRANEY: Defeat shines light on UNLV weaknesses
  • 2008 improvements not nearly enough
  • LAS VEGAS INVITATIONAL: Gillispie tackles challenge
  • De La Hoya seeks return to his peak
  • GLOBAL SPORTS CLASSIC: Campus comfy for Cal coach



  • Then again, perhaps we can hope some of those items we would like to purchase somehow might get off the shelves and wander down the aisles to a point where we don't have to carry them too far.

    What if this happened to you and you were part owner of the store?

    That's what has happened to Nevada's hunters. During the past five years, more than 1.7 million acres of publicly owned lands in Nevada have been made off limits to all but a select group. This has been accomplished through the creation of 45 new wilderness areas in Clark, Lincoln and Nye counties on land managed by the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Forest Service and the National Park Service.

    While a wilderness designation won't change much on lands managed by the Park Service, it significantly will alter the management philosophy on lands administered by the BLM and the Forest Service. No mechanized means of transport are allowed in these areas, and that includes everything that utilizes a wheel -- even a deer cart.

    Perhaps Anthony Headlry summed it up best.

    "Friends of mine went on a cow elk hunt a few weeks ago. When they came back, they said both sides of Cave Valley was a wilderness area and (they) had no access to go any place to hunt without walking at least five miles," Headlry wrote in an e-mail. "People we talk to are very mad, to say the least. There is talk about not hunting in Nevada and going to Utah or some other state. ...

    "We understand that you can hunt in a wilderness area, but how many men do you know that can walk five, 10, 15 miles or more and then haul out a 200-pound deer or a 600-pound or larger elk?"

    He has a point. Hunters who have contacted the BLM office in Ely were told they would have to plan their hunts better. I translate that as meaning buy a horse, hire a guide or get in shape. We probably all should do the latter, but many will have to hunt the edges of the wilderness and hope something stumbles into you -- kind of like waiting at the end of those closed aisles in the grocery store.

    The White Pine County Conservation, Recreation, and Development act of 2006 and the Lincoln County Conservation, Recreation, and Development act of 2004 are two of the bills that created the wilderness areas. Hunters long have led the way when it comes to conservation efforts, but now the recreation component of what they do is limited to that select few who either own horses or can hire a guide to pack you in.

    Harry Reid and John Ensign, Nevada's U.S. senators, co-sponsored both bills and the Clark County version in 2002.

    Two readers, Layne and Lori, who long have fished and camped North Creek Road, are concerned the bills will prevent people from learning about the area's rich history.

    ''Many of the roads in this area have mining history, ranching history, cattlemen history and Basque sheepherder history at the end of them,'' they wrote in an e-mail. ''Now all of this will be kept from the public so that most people will not even know that this area under the strictest rule does not even qualify as a wilderness area."

    Rob Buonomici, chief game warden for the Nevada Department of Wildlife, posed this question: "What do you think would happen to all the customers if a store closed down some of its aisles and limited you to only a few where the groceries weren't quite as good?"

    Anyone with sense knows it won't be long before you lose your best customers. Nevada's wild lands and wildlife can't afford that.

    Doug Nielsen is an award-winning freelance writer and a conservation educator for the Nevada Department of Wildlife. He can be reached at doug@takinitoutside.com.



    Leave Your Comment 4 Reader Comments
    Terms & Conditions
    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

    Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
    Current Word Count:

    NB wrote on November 15, 2007 08:16 PM: Here's a thought, mule deer numbers were at all time record highs about 1984-6. How many people do you know used atv's for hunting at that time? Since that time the use of atv's and four wheel drive vehicles as well as all kinds of other high tech gadgets have become common place in the drive anywhere you want hunting world. Mean while our deer herd numbers have spiraled downward to record low numbers during that same time frame. mmmmm,I wonder if there is a connection?


    SandyJ wrote on November 15, 2007 07:57 PM: What would you do if you went to the super market & went up & down isle after isle & all the shelves were either bare or the food quality was poor? Do you think you as a customer would go somewhere else to find the food that you need to survive? The super market analogy is cute but it just goes to show you that this goes back to being an economic issue about how many tags can be sold instead of doing what is in the best interest of the wildlife through sound management practices. I for one would rather eat my venison without the dust of ATV's landing on my plate.
    I leave you with this thought:
    A half truth presented as if it were the whole truth is still a lie!


    danaj wrote on November 15, 2007 12:54 PM: I found it very disturbing the inacuracy of the information provided to hunters and conservationist in this article. The most accurate statement was that there is in fact wilderness designations in White Pine and Lincoln Countys and the most inaccurate statements lead hunters reading this to beleive that there is a chain and padlock on these areas. I was just involved this last weekend with a young women who had drawn a very hard to get bull elk tag. The young lady and her father chose to hunt within the wilderness boundary's and get away from all of the traffic on the well traveled roads. To make a long and wonderful hunting story short, the young lady harvested a 6-point bull elk less than half a mile from a well traveled county maintained road. To say the young hunter was excited about this experience would be an understatement. I would like to point out that the area she had harvested her bull in was inundated with several miles of two track roads and atv trails which had been open only a year before prior to the wilderness designation. Last year you would not have found a bull elk or cow elk for that matter within several miles of this location during the hunting season. Yes it is always work when you harvest an animal but that has always been part of the outdoor experience. I am forty-five years old and can still get around pretty good in the mountains including packing out game on my back, I know some day that my long hikes in the mountains will come to an end. One thing for sure though is I know because of wilderness designations, my children and my grandchildren will have the same hunting opportunities I had.


    BC wrote on November 15, 2007 11:10 AM: When is open season on bureaucrats?

    Civil disobedience, anyone?