- May 11th, 2011, 10:45 pm
#347782
I thought the catchy title might,at the least, get some curious looks.
It seems that over the last five years, Liberty has timbered significant portions of wooded land; sometimes for expansion- sometimes for who knows why, such as the entire ridge on the east side of the mountains that was timbered a couple of years ago (did we need money that badly?) In that scenario, there seemed to be no apparent reason and some of the trails had to be rebuilt afterwards. Now a section just north of the water tank on Candler's Mtn. Rd. has been cleared; initially the word was that there would be some fields over there, but now there seems to be no plan- just a big brown spot, again with more trails removed from service.
For as much as LU crows about all the outdoor activities that are afforded students, why are areas timbered without thought for the trail system that is well used and has been developed as a part of the LU "outdoor experience." Is there a grand plan or is this type of work instituted as haphazardly as it seems?
It seems that over the last five years, Liberty has timbered significant portions of wooded land; sometimes for expansion- sometimes for who knows why, such as the entire ridge on the east side of the mountains that was timbered a couple of years ago (did we need money that badly?) In that scenario, there seemed to be no apparent reason and some of the trails had to be rebuilt afterwards. Now a section just north of the water tank on Candler's Mtn. Rd. has been cleared; initially the word was that there would be some fields over there, but now there seems to be no plan- just a big brown spot, again with more trails removed from service.
For as much as LU crows about all the outdoor activities that are afforded students, why are areas timbered without thought for the trail system that is well used and has been developed as a part of the LU "outdoor experience." Is there a grand plan or is this type of work instituted as haphazardly as it seems?