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Oregon Badlands again a crime scene!
In little more than a year's time, vandals have destroyed or damaged American Indian pictographs in the Badlands
east of Bend and illegally logged between 10 and 20 old-growth juniper trees. So far, no suspects have been arrested.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Note: This is a case of the theft of selected old growth Juniper trees from a designated Wilderness Study Area, for purposes of sale to the Juniper furniture and architectural wood business.

Although the BLM officials state that this was a simple case of fire wood cutting by anonymous folks, we believe that is not true. (Illegal firewood cutting is not a high priority.)

We can see no evidence of wood cutting for fire wood or fence posts. The selected trees had been cut high in volcanic rock outcroppings, where they had been protected for perhaps hundreds of years from periodic natural fires. They were very tight ringed from very slow growth on top of the rock formations. Easy trees to take for fire wood on the flat, were by-passed to select these trees. There is no evidence of cutting or splitting the wood to short lengths. Very long chain saws were used. The loggers must have used a hoist on their truck to load the heavy logs and huge limbs.

The cut fence along Highway 20 was found and repaired by the BLM without anyone following the tracks to almost 20 old growth tree stumps, only a few of which are pictured above. The stumps were discovered and reported to the BLM by Badlands hikers. The BLM was not aware of the theft before their call on March 16, 2004. We photographed the stumps with the hikers on March 17 and alerted interested parties. We visited the site with ONDA, The Bulletin and the BLM the next day. Read the story.

The Juniper thieves will not be pursued due to the workload of the under staffed and under funded Prineville office of the BLM according to BLM officials.
 --Webmeister.

 

 

 

  The Badlands Wilderness
BLM partners with "Friends of the Badlands" to provide Stewardship for Badlands WSA
Badlands wilderness trail closures
Bend Oregon Badlands WSA hiking map available from BLM
Hunters who use ATVs are hurting Oregon's elk population
BLM's final UDRMP opens Bend's Badlands to Geocaching
BLM's final UDRMP closes Bend's Badlands WSA to motorized vehicle use
Wilderness workshop for USDA Forest Service held by University of Idaho
BLM's UDRMP plans for Badlands deal with exploding public use
Map, compass and GPS navigation training Noodle in The Badlands
Deschutes County Commissioners fail to support Badlands Wilderness!
Deschutes County takes no position on Badlands Wilderness
Deschutes County Commissioner DeWolf supports Badlands Wilderness
OpEd - Dirt road through The Badlands must close
Photos of Road 8 damage sent to Commissioners
Badlands Wilderness with a road?
The Badlands have unique interest for the hiker
BLM guidelines for Geocaching on public lands
Geocaching on Federal Forest Lands
OpEd - Geocaching should not be banned in the Badlands
Fee Demo groundwork may save Geocaching on our public lands
Protest of exclusion of Geocaching in Badlands WSA in BLM's UDRMP
BLM's UDRMP puts Bend's Badlands off limits to Geocaching
Deschutes County Commissioners hearing on Badlands Wilderness support
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OpEd - Badlands part of BLM's recreation management area
OpEd - We need the Badlands Wilderness
OpEd - Off-roaders have no reason to fear Badlands Wilderness designation
Speak for the Badlands at Town Hall Meeting
Hiking poles are becoming essential gear
Vandals destroy ancient pictographs in the Badlands
Senator Wyden tests support of Badlands Wilderness
Badlands Wilderness endorsed by Bend City Commissioners
The Badlands: proposed for Wilderness status
The Badlands unique geologic forms explained by Chitwood  pdf
The Badlands, a brief history
The Badlands pictographs reported 75 year ago