The San Juan National Forest has approved a large forest treatment plan north of Dolores and a new trail south of Rico.

The Salter Vegetation Management Project will thin 22,346 acres of ponderosa pine and Gambel oak to accomplish forest health and commercial timber goals.

The 10-year plan will be done in phases, and adjustments were made to reduce truck impacts to the town of Dolores and popular trails in in the Boggy Draw area.

After meeting with Dolores officials the following changes were made to the plan:

Disruptive noise from the use of engine brakes on Dunlap Hill was a concern expressed by Dolores.

During a demonstration for town officials, Montezuma County Commissioner Jim Candelaria showed if driven at a slow speed, a heavy truck could safely descend the mesa and utilize jake brakes in a way that does not create the blaring noise.

A portion of the project overlaps the popular network of trails and dispersed camping in the Boggy Draw area. That area would not be logged until 2028, and would be given special attention minimize recreation impacts, forest officials said.

According to the project’s environmental assessment, temporary trail closures and rerouting of trails would be required during the project to accommodate logging operations.

Trail mitigation includes:

Forest planners emphasized that the Boggy Draw motorized and nonmotorized trail system will overall remain open during the life of the project. Logging will be selective thinning, not clear-cutting, and it will not happen all at once.

“(The Salter) project is an effort to reduce stocking and increase resilience and health of ponderosa pine stands to create a more natural forest,” Padilla said. “Our attempt is to maintain forest stand health so we do not lose it to wildfire, beetle kill, or disease.”

The Dolores Ranger District also released the Final Decision Notice and Finding of No Significant Impact for the Rio Grande Southern Trail Component of the Rico Trails Project.

The decision authorizes construction and maintenance of one new 4.3-mile non-motorized trail that would travel from Rico south along the Dolores River. The plan also approves construction of a bridge across the river to connect the trail with the Scotch Creek Road. Construction is pending available funding.

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