Roadside Issues - Grant Stephens
Posted: Thu Sep 15, 2005 2:19 am
Since Rick Weber has been kind enough to call me with important issues related to Roadside I thought it would be appropriate to clarify what has been going on there in the past 18 months. As the climbing community is aware, John Haight (owner of the Cave Run Bike Shop and a climber) and I have purchased land that includes what we climbers know as Roadside. Overall, the land is held by the Graining Fork Nature Preserve, LLC, of which John and I are the only shareholders. I have been focused on the legal aspects of acquiring this land from over fifty heirs spread all across the country, which has been a huge and complex task. It has taken over a year of legal work, genealogical research and boundary research to finalize the acquisition. This is the primary reason that we have been somewhat passive in dealing with the property as it relates to climbers, until now.
We welcome input from the climbing community. Feel free to email me at gstephens@kyattorney.com if you have any questions or concerns. We acquired this property for the sole purpose of preserving it for climbing. If we had not done this then it would have been developed for cabins. I have personlly spoken with individuals who were trying to get their hands on Roadside at the same time I was working on the project.
Unfortunately Roadside has been loved to death by climbers. The tree below Crazy Fingers used to be large and healthy. Over the years I watched as climbers slowly removed parts of this tree to make room for routes or to make routes safer. The tree used to shade that area, which is now barren. The land around Crazy Fingers, Motha and C-Sharp B-Flat is quickly eroding because climbers love the areas. The question is how to stop the damage and improve the areas. I am open to suggestions from folks who are much sharper than I in erosion control, trail building and the like.
Thanks,
Grant Stephens
We welcome input from the climbing community. Feel free to email me at gstephens@kyattorney.com if you have any questions or concerns. We acquired this property for the sole purpose of preserving it for climbing. If we had not done this then it would have been developed for cabins. I have personlly spoken with individuals who were trying to get their hands on Roadside at the same time I was working on the project.
Unfortunately Roadside has been loved to death by climbers. The tree below Crazy Fingers used to be large and healthy. Over the years I watched as climbers slowly removed parts of this tree to make room for routes or to make routes safer. The tree used to shade that area, which is now barren. The land around Crazy Fingers, Motha and C-Sharp B-Flat is quickly eroding because climbers love the areas. The question is how to stop the damage and improve the areas. I am open to suggestions from folks who are much sharper than I in erosion control, trail building and the like.
Thanks,
Grant Stephens