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GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK
Conviction For Illegal Mountain Biking On January 20th, three men – David Yost,, Sean Monterastelli, and Jacob Thompson – hiked out the Bright Angeel Trail, backpacking out their mountain bikes. The group of three cyclists told visitors that they were on a two-year-long mountain biking trip, riding their bikes from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, to the tip of South America, and that they had carried their bikes across the canyon. They also told them to look at their web page (http://www.ridingthespine.com). Several days later, ranger Paul Austin checked out the page and discovered photos and video of the group riding their bikes on the North Kaibab Trail. In addition, there were photos and video of them camped on an upper section of the trail. In their journal, they wrote about riding the trail and their concern about being caught by rangers: "(We) began riding down the trail…'Goat' [one of the three] managed to bomb section after section of the trail, walking his bike only when coming into contact with other trail hikers, and when those infuriating water bars were too high to bunny hop…we were excited bby the prospects of a day filled with epic downhill, we hopped on our bikes and headed down, sliding our way down a treacherous mix of snow and loose rock. Almost immediately I flew over a series of ledges and cracked the rear end off my Xtracycle." On February 16th, Austin and AUSA Camille Bibles presented a criminal complaint and affidavit before US Magistrate Judge Mark Aspey in Flagstaff, who in turn issued a summons for the group to appear in his court. Yost, Monterastelli and Thompson were charged with camping without a permit, camping in an undesignated area, use of a bicycle in a closed area, giving false information, and conspiracy. Austin tracked the individuals through their website as they rode to Southern Arizona and prepared to cross into Mexico. They had posted in their blog that they were attending the "24 Hours in the Old Pueblo," a large and popular mountain bike race north of Tucson. Saguaro rangers Todd Austin and Heather Yates drove to the event site on February 17th and were able to locate the trio. Austin posed as a freelance writer interested in the group's trip, then later identified himself as a federal law enforcement ranger and issued each his summons to appear in court in Flagstaff. The three men retained an attorney and subsequently reached a plea agreement to three charges. In lieu of a $500 fine, the men agreed to donate $500 each to the Grand Canyon Search & Rescue Fund. They also agreed to redact sections of their website pertaining to illegal activities and were sentenced to 48 hours in Coconino County jail. The case generated considerable media attention. Contact Information Name: Bil Vandergraff, Supervisory Park Ranger, Canyon District === I am working on creating wildlife habitat that is off-limits to humans ("pure habitat"). Want to help? (I spent the previous 8 years fighting auto dependence and road construction.) Please don't put a cell phone next to any part of your body that you are fond of! http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande |
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On Mar 13, 7:51 wrote:
GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK Conviction For Illegal Mountain Biking On January 20th, three men - David Yost,, Sean Monterastelli, and Jacob Thompson Correction, those were not "men", nor were they "mountain bikers". They were three trustafarian doofi who just happened to have mountain bikes. JD |
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![]() "Mike Vandeman" wrote in message ... GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK Conviction For Illegal Mountain Biking On January 20th, three men - David Yost,, Sean Monterastelli, and Jacob Thompson - hiked out the Bright Angeel Trail, backpacking out their mountain bikes. The group of three cyclists told visitors that they were on a two-year-long mountain biking trip, riding their bikes from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, to the tip of South America, and that they had carried their bikes across the canyon. They also told them to look at their web page (http://www.ridingthespine.com). Several days later, ranger Paul Austin checked out the page and discovered photos and video of the group riding their bikes on the North Kaibab Trail. In addition, there were photos and video of them camped on an upper section of the trail. In their journal, they wrote about riding the trail and their concern about being caught by rangers: "(We) began riding down the trail.'Goat' [one of the three] managed to bomb section after section of the trail, walking his bike only when coming into contact with other trail hikers, and when those infuriating water bars were too high to bunny hop.we were excited bby the prospects of a day filled with epic downhill, we hopped on our bikes and headed down, sliding our way down a treacherous mix of snow and loose rock. Almost immediately I flew over a series of ledges and cracked the rear end off my Xtracycle." On February 16th, Austin and AUSA Camille Bibles presented a criminal complaint and affidavit before US Magistrate Judge Mark Aspey in Flagstaff, who in turn issued a summons for the group to appear in his court. Yost, Monterastelli and Thompson were charged with camping without a permit, camping in an undesignated area, use of a bicycle in a closed area, giving false information, and conspiracy. Austin tracked the individuals through their website as they rode to Southern Arizona and prepared to cross into Mexico. They had posted in their blog that they were attending the "24 Hours in the Old Pueblo," a large and popular mountain bike race north of Tucson. Saguaro rangers Todd Austin and Heather Yates drove to the event site on February 17th and were able to locate the trio. Austin posed as a freelance writer interested in the group's trip, then later identified himself as a federal law enforcement ranger and issued each his summons to appear in court in Flagstaff. The three men retained an attorney and subsequently reached a plea agreement to three charges. In lieu of a $500 fine, the men agreed to donate $500 each to the Grand Canyon Search & Rescue Fund. They also agreed to redact sections of their website pertaining to illegal activities and were sentenced to 48 hours in Coconino County jail. The case generated considerable media attention. Contact Information Name: Bil Vandergraff, Supervisory Park Ranger, Canyon District === I am working on creating wildlife habitat that is off-limits to humans ("pure habitat"). Want to help? (I spent the previous 8 years fighting auto dependence and road construction.) Please don't put a cell phone next to any part of your body that you are fond of! http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande day late and a dollar short....kind of like your science |
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On Mar 13, 9:51 am, Mike Vandeman wrote:
snip cut and paste NPS Morning Report snip Geez Doc do you really want ppl posting every time some user gets a citation at GRCA? R |
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snip long indictment of bikers being bad
I'm glad these guys got busted. I've been on some of those trails and am eager to see them preserved. So that makes for documented evidence of about 1/100th of one percent of mountain bikers being assholes. IMHO that's still 5-10% below the national average for the general population. |
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On Mar 15, 3:36 pm, "Mamba" wrote:
snip long indictment of bikers being bad I'm glad these guys got busted. I've been on some of those trails and am eager to see them preserved. So that makes for documented evidence of about 1/100th of one percent of mountain bikers being assholes. IMHO that's still 5-10% below the national average for the general population. You need to come out to SoCal and see where the percentage brings people on mountain bikes above the national average. JD |
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On 2007-03-16, JD wrote:
On Mar 15, 3:36 pm, "Mamba" wrote: snip long indictment of bikers being bad I'm glad these guys got busted. I've been on some of those trails and am eager to see them preserved. So that makes for documented evidence of about 1/100th of one percent of mountain bikers being assholes. IMHO that's still 5-10% below the national average for the general population. You need to come out to SoCal and see where the percentage brings people on mountain bikes above the national average. JD I live in SoCal. And I hike a *lot*, all over the place. I haven't noticed any particular problems with mountain bikers. *Horses* are infinitely more annoying, when they get out on wet trails. They leave ankle-traps that can persist for in this dry climate for months. I'm pretty tolerant of however folks use the backcountry (just so long as they don't clearcut or leave mountains of toxic tailings (: ), but I do wish the horsemen would stay off trails during the few days each year when they're wet. Where are you hiking that you're running into problems with mountain bikers? If you want to get away from the crowds, take a look at the Hundred Peaks Section's climbing guides at: http://angeles.sierraclub.org/hps/ (Go to the peak list and then drill down to the individual peaks.) You can prolly do 90% of the routes listed there and never see another soul, let alone a mountain biker, after you move away from your car. Cheers, Wolf. -- Dr. Brian Leverich Co-moderator, soc.genealogy.methods/GENMTD-L Angeles Chapter LTC Admin Chair http://angeles.sierraclub.org/ltc/ P.O. Box 6831, Frazier Park, CA 93222-6831 |
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On Thu, 15 Mar 2007 16:36:32 -0700, "Mamba"
wrote: snip long indictment of bikers being bad I'm glad these guys got busted. I've been on some of those trails and am eager to see them preserved. So that makes for documented evidence of about 1/100th of one percent of mountain bikers being assholes. IMHO that's still 5-10% below the national average for the general population. My figures are closer to 100% Even IMBA has a scientific study on its website showing that something like 83.1% of mountain bikers don't obey the law. Then they removed it, of course! But I saved a copy: http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande/mtb76 === I am working on creating wildlife habitat that is off-limits to humans ("pure habitat"). Want to help? (I spent the previous 8 years fighting auto dependence and road construction.) Please don't put a cell phone next to any part of your body that you are fond of! http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande |
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wrote in message
oups.com... On Mar 13, 9:51 am, Mike Vandeman wrote: snip cut and paste NPS Morning Report snip Geez Doc do you really want ppl posting every time some user gets a citation at GRCA? R If you were as screwed up in the head as Mike, the answer would be "yes". Thankfully, whack jobs like Mike are few and far between...even more thankfully, it seems unlikely he'll ever procreate. GG |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Three (More) Mountain Bikers Arrested for Illegally Mountain Biking in Grand Canyon National Park | Mike Vandeman | Mountain Biking | 6 | March 16th 07 03:35 AM |
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