Thanks guys, I realize the surrounding terrain has a lot to do with it, but you've shared some valuable information about getting the un-cuttable stuff further from the trail to make maintenance easier.
For me, there just isn't a lot of enjoyment derived from threading your handlebars through small trees, and having to slow down for them is pretty worthless. Catching your bars isn't much fun, either.
Totally agree there! I hate having to slow up to twist through some narrow trees, and most of the time there isn't a reason to be going slow on the other side!
I will just say to always check with the Trail Steward before altering a trail. As mentioned above speed control is paramount to controlling erosion and having a sustainable trail.
Trails are different. As Gary mentioned at Blue mound you might be clearing a wide corridor to be able to make route finding through the rock gardens easier. These rocks also serve to control speed. At CamRock small trees might be the only local tool available. Having an open freeway leading to a sharp turn leads to tons of erosion. And as we have found on work days quarrying and hauling rocks to accomplish the control task is a ton of work and takes hours of labor for each feature.
As mentioned sticks and/or cut off branches are a different story and should be removed.
I will put in another plug for the new Adopt a Trail at CamRock:
http://www.madcitydirt.com/index.php?topic=1588.0]Thanks guys, I realize the surrounding terrain has a lot to do with it, but you've shared some valuable information about getting the un-cuttable stuff further from the trail to make maintenance easier.
For me, there just isn't a lot of enjoyment derived from threading your handlebars through small trees, and having to slow down for them is pretty worthless. Catching your bars isn't much fun, either.
Totally agree there! I hate having to slow up to twist through some narrow trees, and most of the time there isn't a reason to be going slow on the other side!
I will just say to always check with the Trail Steward before altering a trail. As mentioned above speed control is paramount to controlling erosion and having a sustainable trail.
Trails are different. As Gary mentioned at Blue mound you might be clearing a wide corridor to be able to make route finding through the rock gardens easier. These rocks also serve to control speed. At CamRock small trees might be the only local tool available. Having an open freeway leading to a sharp turn leads to tons of erosion. And as we have found on work days quarrying and hauling rocks to accomplish the control task is a ton of work and takes hours of labor for each feature.
As mentioned sticks and/or cut off branches are a different story and should be removed.
I will put in another plug for the new Adopt a Trail at CamRock:
http://www.madcitydirt.com/index.php?topic=1588.0 I am hoping folks decide to "adopt" their section of trail. I would love to work with the CamRock Trail Posse on sections like this to look at options and work with you to decide how to manage your section of trail 8)