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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
New
Ranger named for Grassland Kristin Bail
was recently appointed as the new District Ranger for the Crooked River
National Grassland, which is located about eight miles northeast of Sisters.
Bail brings 15 years of wildland
administration experience with the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land
Management to her new position.
Her most recent assignment
was as Acting District Ranger in the Paulina Ranger District of the Ochoco
National Forest. Before that, she spent two years as Hydrologist for the
BLM's Oregon Office and 10 years with the BLM in Lakeview. She is a geology
graduate from Washington State University.
The 155,000-acre National
Grassland is home to the Middle Deschutes and Crooked Rivers, both of
which are Congressionally designated Wild and Scenic Rivers.
The region also includes the
lower reaches of Squaw Creek, which runs through Sisters.
Administered with the Ochoco
National Forest, the area was originally established as a National Grassland
in 1960 as part of the National Forest System.
The Crooked River National
Grassland has long been a busy Central Oregon recreation destination and
its popularity is growing.
As a result, the Grassland
is now the subject of an ongoing environmental analysis to examine livestock
grazing practices and vegetation management.
"This is a time of opportunity
and challenge for the Crooked River National Grassland," said Bail. "I
look forward to working with the many partners who contribute so much
to the health and productivity of these unique lands."
Portions of the Grassland
were impacted by wildfires in recent years, including the Eyerly and Geneva
fires; so, fire control and rehabilitation are among the challenges facing
Bail as she assumes her new role in Central Oregon.
Ochoco National Forest Supervisor
Larry Timchak had kind words for Bail.
"Kristin brings a blend of
people and resource skills to the Grassland Ranger job," he said, in a
prepared statement. "Her proactive and positive approach will help the
Crooked River National Grassland move ahead with an increasingly complex
and diverse workload."
The western boundary of the
Grassland roughly parallels the northeastern edge of Deschutes National
Forest, about eight miles east of Camp Sherman. It stretches east nearly
to Grizzly Mountain, overlooking Prineville, and north to well beyond
Madras.
The southern boundary abuts
Smith Rock State Park and the Squaw Creek Canyon area.
The federal lands comprising
the Grassland were pieced together from abandoned homesteads that were
attempted between 1880 and 1930. After the region proved itself to be
inhospitable to dryland farming, the government began rehabilitation of
the scarred land in 1954.
The region is rich in historical
value, particularly as it relates to the homestead era.
Historical relics of the failed
homesteads still abound throughout the region, but collection of artifacts
or antiquities is forbidden without a permit. |
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