I'm asking from the moral/ethical/mind your own business angle...

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Thanks for the response. I tried, last night to do just that, and basically got the 'we love the land' or 'we aren't hurting anything' types of counter responses...SuperstitionGuy wrote:I would explain to them the rules of the Wilderness Area and convince them to do otherwise. Especially if they are a youth group and just simply do not know the possible consequences of their actions. I had to do this once on the rim above Strawberry when a church group was trying to enter a Forest Service Road and camp on a late Friday winter night. The Forest Service had placed closed signs on the roads because of the unfrozen ground with snow on top. I took them from the rim to the Fossil Springs trail head west of Strawberry and we camped there instead.
And Is this one of those clothing optional groups where we can get some laughs as well?Jim_H wrote:Where are they going, anyway?
From the looks of some of the potential attendees, I could think of a view other verbs and nouns, were that the case.SuperstitionGuy wrote:And Is this one of those clothing optional groups where we can get some laughs as well?Jim_H wrote:Where are they going, anyway?![]()
;)
Makes me wonder if its one of those job security kinds of things. No people out hiking, no job.big_load wrote:I once encountered a group of over 50 people dayhiking the Black Mesa Loop. It was more crowded than dowtown Gilbert. I encountered an oversized group nearthe junction of the Reavis Ranch and Rogers Canyon Trails. (I still laugh about how badly I unintentionally scared them. Did they think I was going to mug 20 people all by myself?). I didn't report either group, because it seems pretty clear that organized groups routinely violate the regulations and the Rangers I've talked to previously haven't been very interested in taking reports of violations.
Obviously, any group of hikers is less damaging than a strip mine, but I think you underestimate the impact of large groups. When on the trail, a large group is not really damaging anything, but it's when they step off the trail that such a big group causes problems. There are few places in Arizona wilderness areas where 25 people can camp on a hardened site (which the LNT people tell me is the only type of site you should be using), so it's likely that the group is going to have to create their own sites, trampling vegetation and disturbing the soil. With 20+ people, even taking a break off the trail somewhere can do damage.Jim_H wrote:Taking 25 or even 50 people is different than everyone bringing trash and littering, or strip mining, or ATV riders tearing up a place for the sport doing donuts on wet grass. Seriously, unless they link arms 10 abreast and hike that way, they aren't really that bad. Can one tell the difference between 3 groups of 10, and 1 group of 30, on the trail?
It is your battle, and as I suggested first, remind the leader (since a private person) and if they continue to do it, I feel you are better off ignoring it. Because, as I said, the recent trend of becoming outraged over ever trivial thing, especially on the internet, is tiresome and accomplishes little. I am aware of the irony here, it was just a suggestion.
I think it's more along the lines of just more unplanned effort for an underfunded and understaffed organization.JasonCleghorn wrote:Makes me wonder if its one of those job security kinds of things. No people out hiking, no job.big_load wrote:I once encountered a group of over 50 people dayhiking the Black Mesa Loop. It was more crowded than dowtown Gilbert. I encountered an oversized group nearthe junction of the Reavis Ranch and Rogers Canyon Trails. (I still laugh about how badly I unintentionally scared them. Did they think I was going to mug 20 people all by myself?). I didn't report either group, because it seems pretty clear that organized groups routinely violate the regulations and the Rangers I've talked to previously haven't been very interested in taking reports of violations.
Who knows.
Yes. You are right.big_load wrote:I think it's more along the lines of just more unplanned effort for an underfunded and understaffed organization.JasonCleghorn wrote:Makes me wonder if its one of those job security kinds of things. No people out hiking, no job.big_load wrote:I once encountered a group of over 50 people dayhiking the Black Mesa Loop. It was more crowded than dowtown Gilbert. I encountered an oversized group nearthe junction of the Reavis Ranch and Rogers Canyon Trails. (I still laugh about how badly I unintentionally scared them. Did they think I was going to mug 20 people all by myself?). I didn't report either group, because it seems pretty clear that organized groups routinely violate the regulations and the Rangers I've talked to previously haven't been very interested in taking reports of violations.
Who knows.