Picture

NEWS

NEWS | Bayfield Area Trails

  Best Hiking in Bayfield!
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • OUR WORK
  • EXPLORE
  • REPORTS
  • NEWS
  • SUPPORT US
  • PARTICIPATE

Economic Impact Study Trail User Surveys

8/27/2024

0 Comments

 
Volunteer Opportunity Trail User Surveys
We are launching the Bayfield Area Trails Economic impact study trail user surveys. We need your help.
 
Trails! Hiking, XC skiing, snowshoeing, biking …. presumably trails in the Bayfield Peninsula are valuable and attract people to the area to visit and live.
  1. But how valuable and how many people?
  2. What is the economic impact of trail visitors on local businesses?  
  3. Should local governments and potential grantors be investing more or less toward trail development?
  4. When land use decisions are being considered, can the value of trails be calculated and factored into decisions?
Trail User Surveys:

​
A central element to the study will be gathering data at trailheads across the Peninsula. Starting in mid-September, volunteers will conduct trail user interviews regarding trail use, where trail users live, and their local spending.

​Interviews will be conducted on multiple trails, at different times of day, on varied days of the week and over all four seasons!
User Survey Locations
  • Big Ravine – Gil Larsen
  • Big Ravine – North Ravine
  • Big Ravine – Hilltop
  • Brownstone Trail
  • Les Voigt Fish Hatchery
  • Jerry Jolly Trails
  • Salmo Trail
  • Mt. Ashwabay
  • Lost Creek Falls
  • Siskiwit River Preserve
  • Frog Bay Tribal Park
We need volunteers: If you’re not the type to run a chainsaw, swing an ax, or build rock steps, this is an excellent opportunity to support Bayfield Area Trails. We are looking for folks who are willing to sign up for 2-hour shifts at a trailhead where they will greet trail users, conduct a short interview, and enter interview results into a database via a personal tablet or phone. Volunteers will receive training and will be provided name tags and a Bayfield Area Trails ball cap to identify them as trail volunteers. Volunteers will have lots of flexibility to sign up when times are convenient for them; and they may choose to work with another person or alone.
 
Timing: We plan to conduct the first volunteer training the week after Labor Day and to start trail surveys by September 15th.
 
Sign up here: If you are interested in possibly volunteering, please sign up here. We will invite you to the training and give you a chance to give it a try! Please sign up via this link.

Meet the project coordinator: Hillary Jewell, an avid outdoorsperson, farmer, and mother of two small children brings skill and enthusiasm to the project. Hilary will coordinate and support volunteers conducting surveys at trailheads across the Bayfield Peninsula.
READ THE PROJECT FACT SHEET
Woman holding a fish on the shore of a lake.
Project Coordinator: Hillary Jewell
0 Comments

Prepping the Upper Pileated Woodpecker Trail

8/27/2024

0 Comments

 
Picture
At 9 am on Friday August 16th, Nan Fey, Bob Feyen, Neil Howk, John Ipsen, Kate Kitchell, Ted May, and Kris Wegerson met at the Mount Ashwabay parking lot to work on the Upper Pileated Woodpecker connector trail between the Jolly Long Link and the Ashwabay parking lot.
Moving wet rocks can be a messy job.
John and Kate remove a rock so the Fecon mulcher can clear the trail.
Nan Fey admires the handy rock sling for moving rocks.
Kate, Neil, Nan, John and Kris removed rocks from a portion of the trail where Bayfield County plans to bring in machinery to mulch the trail surface in early September. This will be followed by Doug Olson’s handiwork to install rock in a drainage that crosses the trail and to elevate the trail surface and create drainage to make the trail fully passable prior to the end of the season.
Neil-John-Kris-Ted with the new log steps in the background.
One step at a time.
Setting logs in the trail and securing them with rebar
Ted and Bob worked on stabilizing a footbridge that was impacted by flooding earlier this summer. Neil, Nan, and Kate hauled rocks from the creek bed to armor the streambank around the bridge. Ted, Kate, Kris, John, and Bob also dug some water bars across the trail on the slope leading down to the bridge to prevent erosion from heavy runoff and foot traffic.
Ted, John, Kris, and Neil returned on Saturday August 17th to install steps/water bars on the Pileated Woodpecker Trail just south of the spur trail to Chickadee Point. They installed 15 steps along the switchbacks on the steepest part of the trail. Additional steps are still needed, but these new ones should help divert water from running down the trail as well as create steps for trail users where the clay soils can create slippery conditions when wet or icy.
 
Although the trail remains closed at the Red Dam gate behind the Les Voigt Fish Hatchery, it can be accessed from Mount Ashwabay as it connects to the Jolly Long Trail that ultimately leads to the Jerry Jolly Trail network from Star Route.
 
This work puts us several steps closer to having a full trail connection between the fish hatchery and Mt. Ashwabay. Stay tuned for more progress!
0 Comments

Great Days on the Gil Larsen and Hemlock Heights Trails

8/4/2024

0 Comments

 
Volunteer working on Diverting the creek away from the eroding bank
Ten volunteers tackled several tasks in the Big Ravine on Friday August 2nd and Saturday August 3rd to repair damage after the June 19th flood and to make the trails more sustainable.
 
On Friday August 2nd, volunteers took on three projects along the Gil Larsen and Pine Bluff Trails. The lower Gil Larsen Trail was widened and moved away from the edge where the creek was undercutting the bank. A timber was set along the trail to guide hikers away from the edge.
THree volunteers carrying a long timber.
Two volunteers moving rock in a creek bed.
A smooth trail segment lined with a long timber border.
The crew moved rocks and an iron pipe leftover from the historic water works to encourage the stream to flow away from where it was undercutting the bank just below the trail. To prevent further erosion, they reinforced the stream bank with large boulders. “Even if Mother Nature doesn’t accept our encouragement, it’s always fun to play in the creek on a hot summer day,” said crew leader Mike Kinnee.

On the uppermost end of the Gil Larsen Trail, folks dismantled a logjam and debris dam that developed over several years of flooding in the ravine that caused the creek to overflow the trail in June of this year. Trail adopter Genevieve Johnson remarked “Because it was creating a large floodplain it made sense to liberate the creek so it could flow freely. Also, this will reduce the threat of more trail damage in future high flow events.”


While they were in the upper end of the Big Ravine, folks did some touch up work on the Pine Bluff Trail, restoring grade reversals and drainage ditches to divert water off of the trail.
Two volunteers moving toward an old segment of pipe across the stream.
Lets use this pipe to protect the stream bank.
A volunteer cutting through a log jam.
Kris cuts the log jam.
On Saturday August 3rd, volunteers focused their efforts on the Hemlock Heights Trail. In the shade of the towering trees, they started with stabilizing the steep hillside above a switchback near the top of the trail. Brush bundles of aspen saplings tied with jute twine were staked into the hillside to slow runoff in vulnerable locations. Small logs and brush were also hauled in from above and added to hillside.

​According to crew leader Kate Kitchell “The heavy rains on June 19th caused this slope to start to slough onto the trail, so we thought it would be worth experimenting with these brush bundles. The purpose is to slow the flow, capture leaves and other organic matter, and create little shelves where plants may be able to take root. This approach has helped on the School Trail slope, so why not give it a try here?”

Two volunteers placing rocks along a trail edge.
Andy and Mary stabilize the trail edge with rocks.
Two volunteers reconfiguring a trail.
Nan and Chris recontour the trail at the switchback.
Bill Bieganek refurbished a section of rock armoring in the trail where runoff had destabilized the rocks and washed away the soil. His experience with building lots of mountain bike trails was especially helpful.  Gene Lemmenes worked on the cable steps at the top of the trail by filling in rocks and dirt where the steps were starting to become unstable.
Other finishing touches completed by the crew included resetting rock steps, stabilizing the trail edge with rocks, cutting the backslope in a few locations to reestablish a wider trail tread, and raking leaves off of the trail to enable hikers to use the entire trail width. Hemlock Heights looks almost new again!
Thank you volunteers!
  • ​Bill Bieganek
  • Nan Fey
  • John Ipsen
  • Genevieve Johnson
  • Mike Kinnee
  • Kate Kitchell​
  • ​Mary Ledin
  • Andy Ledin
  • Gene Lemmenes
  • Chris Nybo
  • Stephen Vircsik
  • ​Kris Wegerson
0 Comments

    Blog | Bayfield Area Trails

    SUBSCRIBE & VOLUNTEER

    Archives

    July 2025
    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    May 2023
    March 2023
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    February 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020

Bayfield Area Trails logo
Button - Click to Email BAT
Button - Click for Facebook
Button - Click for Instagram

    Comments, suggestions, great experiences? Talk to us!
    ​ 

Submit

TJoseph Media © Copyright 2025-28 Bayfield Area Trails. All Rights Reserved.
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • OUR WORK
  • EXPLORE
  • REPORTS
  • NEWS
  • SUPPORT US
  • PARTICIPATE