[Home] [Up] [Brandon Gulch] [Mitchell Creek] [Camp 3] [Hare Creek]

Photo Albums


dscn0131.jpg (113770 bytes)

North Side of Hare Creek


dscn0333.jpg (38148 bytes)

South Side of Hare Creek

Logging In Hare Creek

Dscn0284.jpg (60709 bytes)In May of this year, the firest year of the new millenium, Jackson Demonstration State Forest (JDSF) sold the right to log  seven million board feet of trees on 599 acres of Lower Hare Creek to the the Mendocino Redwood Company. Logging began in June and is continuing as of this writing.

The logging plan developed by the California Department of Forestry (CDF), the managers of Jackson State Forest completely ignores the potential, major recreation values of this part of the Forest.  Lower Hare Creek is the closet part of Jackson State Forest to Fort Bragg and lies between  heavily populated  Highway 20 and Simpson Lane.   It could have served as a major recreation attraction for this city, as well as serving local residents.  Instead, the areas nearest to the roads are being turned into a logged-over woodlot.  Many decades of healing will be required before Lower Hare Creek once again becomes a true forest, providing shelter and habitat for species dependent on mature redwood forest and exhibiting the wonderful mix of filtered light, shade, ferns,  rhododendrons, and multiple other plants that make walking in a redwood forest nourishment for the spirit.

The photos in the accompanying albums include ones of the north side of Hare Creek prior to logging, showing the beauty of the forest there, a well-used recreation trail, and the many blue rings that mark trees for cutting.  Photos on the south side of Hare Creek show the destruction of the forest, which is especially dramatic in areas of tractor logging, but even where cables are used to remove the logs, the canopy is destroyed and the ground littered with slash. Also shown is how Jackson State logged right up to the backyard of, at least, one of its neighbors.

If you share our goals, please join the Campaign.   Working together, we can save our public forest from further destruction.

Vince Taylor