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2002 |
Suttle
Lake project faces delay
After another meeting with Forest
Service officials last week, Suttle Lake Resort managing partner Mike Abbott
was very discouraged about his company's chances of starting construction
on the new Suttle Lake Lodge.
"Everybody wants to know when
the new lodge is getting started," Abbott said.
The answer, as it has been
for the past several years, is "probably not this year."
As in past years, Suttle Lake
planners once again experienced a series of setbacks in obtaining Forest
Service approvals for a new lodge to replace one that was burned back
in the 1970s.
"We'll have to wait for the
master plan to be reworked and then be approved by the Forest Service,"
said Abbott.
"We have a few more details
to iron out."
Abbott was clearly disappointed.
The resort owners had expected to build the lodge last year, but the plans
were mired down in repeated delays. Now it seems that more red tape has
brought the project to a halt and will cost them yet another year.
"The deal is," said Abbott,
"I just don't think we'll have time to start the lodge this year at the
rate things are going. There's a possibility we could start working on
the new full-service cabins."
Forest Service representative
Maret Pajutee seemed to share Abbott's concern but tried to accentuate
the positive.
"After the decision memo was
released last fall, the next step was to complete the master plan," Pajutee
said.
"It's a complex document that
has to look at a lot of different things....We're all hopeful that it
will happen soon. I think they can get there."
Pajutee explained that the
master plan includes not only the lodge design but revegetation of riparian
areas, water monitoring, protection of old growth trees and a host of
other issues to protect the ecological and aesthetic features of the Suttle
Lake site.
"So, it's taking some time
to pull it all together," she conceded, "but they're doing well. There
are many things that they can start implementing this year."
One of the "partnership" activities
already underway involves the relocation of numerous native plants.
A key aspect of the resort
project is a road safety realignment that will tie the resort's highway
access to the primary road into Suttle Lake, thus eliminating the present
dangerous intersection.
Pajutee said that construction
of the new road is expected to begin within the next month.
Plants from the new road path
have been moved to a greenhouse at Sisters High School, where they will
be cared for until they can be transplanted back to areas under rehabilitation
at Suttle Lake.
In the meantime, the resort's
12 "rustic" camping cabins are still in use, as well as the two existing
full-service cabins.
Business at the resort has
been steadily picking up for the summer, and the restaurant has been busy.
A bright spot for Abbott has
been the success of the new Suttle Lake Tackle Company, which he and Mark
McIntire started this past year. Sales have been growing, and two new
lures are now the leading sellers. One, the "Kokanator," is designed specifically
for Suttle Lake's popular kokanee.
The other lure, the "Red Hot
Hooker," is designed for all trout species, but has the unexpected bonus
of being great for bass, too.
For now, however, fishing
is the only thing that's likely to be hot; the pace of construction will
be heating up any time soon.
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