Virtual OmniBUS Tour heads to Idaho wild lands

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By John McCarthy on January 30, 2009 - 2:38pm

Listen up everyone. We’re about to explore some beautiful but seriously rugged territory. Before we get out of the Virtual OmniBUS here in Idaho, I must stress that you follow today’s guide, John McCarthy, VERY closely. We’re going to hike through the Owyhee Canyonlands. Do not leave John’s sight. When we get back, let’s all take a moment to post comments that convey what we would like to say to Congress about the need to pass the Omnibus Public Land Management Act.


Owyhee travels: Don’t forget your compass

By John McCarthy

Getting out into the Owyhee Canyonlands can easily become getting lost — if care and compass are not taken.

Every year when I lead hikes to introduce groups to this wildest and roughest of lands, my main goal is to make sure everyone stays together and everyone gets back to civilization.

The new half-a-million-acre Wilderness in southwest Idaho is a land defined by rivers, cutting steep canyons out of high desert, sagebrush plateaus. It’s also a landscape of no trails and only rough roads to gain access to empty, open land.

Hiking cross-country — without trails — requires a focus on landmarks, a compass or GPS assisted sense of direction, a good map and an interest in scrambling.

If these cautions don’t capture one’s attention, note the Owyhees (O-why-hees) were named after three Hawaiian trappers who got lost back in the 1800s. Owyhee-Hawaii, the original “Lost” – not seen on TV.

While hiking along rivers is straightforward, you either go upstream or downstream. Again there are no trails and stomping through creeks is often the only way to go. Even hiking canyon rims requires a compass to track loops of squiggly meanders.

Check out place names: Poison Creek, Rattlesnake Creek, Riddle, Crab Spring, Jackass Creek. This is the wild West, rugged and raw. Of course Pleasant Valley, Hidden Valley, and Grassy Ridge may be more appealing.

The attractions are many: fields of lupine; stark bitterroot flowers; a cougar springing from a canyon crack; bighorn lambs running across rock faces; a prairie falcon wheezing past your head; pronghorn bolting across creeks. In the open desert you see things.

Take the OmniBUS along the Mud Flat Road, or Owyhee Uplands Scenic Byway, starting in Jordan Valley, Oregon and ending in Grandview, Idaho — to bounce across the one actual gravel road to traverse this country. Stop off at any of the three proposed wildernesses areas — out of six Idaho areas in wilderness legislation now being considered by Congress — to see North Fork Owyhee Wilderness; Pole Creek Wilderness and Little Jacks Creek Wilderness. Take a hike off the road into wild country.

Carry a compass and water.

photos:
Hikers at Snow Creek in Spring, Owyhee Canyonlands, Idaho. Photo by John McCarthy.

Rattlesnake in Owyhee Canyonlands. Photo by John McCarthy.


TWS Idaho Forest Campaign Director John McCarthy spent more than five years working on the Owyhee Wilderness bill — focused on mapping with the welcome opportunity for many exploratory field trips.


See a map of America's newest wild lands and Wilderness.

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Tags: Canyonlands, Idaho, Omnibus Public Land Management Act, OmniBUS tour, Oregon, Owyhee, wilderness

Comments

Owyhees are worth protecting

I live in Boise and have barely had a chance to explore the desert canyonlands to the southwest of town, but what I have experienced is incredible. It's a place where I am reminded of human vulnerability in the vast expanses of the sagebrush sea.

Sadly, the evidence left of nature's vulnerability to us humans and our machines is also evident--some of the most overriden, ripped up and destroyed areas of the Owyhee Front have paid the price of human wrecklessness, just miles from the lands the Owyhee Public Lands bill would protect. They serve as a terrible warning of the fate of the Owyhee Canyonlands should we chose not to take action to protect them.

Our inequal relationship lies in the fact that the natural world will not protect me from it, as if I am separate and above it, but I have an obligation and a need to protect it from its human elements.

That's why I am on board with the Omnibus bill, and hope you will be inspired to let your Congressional Reps know that the Omnibus Public Lands bill needs their support.

Idaho

I've been to Idaho before and it's a real shame that I didn't get to experience any of these places!

Fred Smilek is the acting president of the Society to Save Endangered Species. It was founded two years ago by Fred Smilek along with his two best friends Charles and Jonathan. http://www.fredjsmilek.com