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SavageLlama
11-22-2004, 12:15
A bit of good news this morning.. :)


Land preserved near Georgia's Appalachian Trail

November 22, 2004
10:11 am
Associated Press Newswires (http://javascript<b></b>:NewWindow(%20'FIISrcDetails','?from=article&ids=aprs');void(0);)

DAHLONEGA, Ga. (AP) - A large tract of land near the Southern end of the Appalachian Trail has been saved from development, thanks to an Atlanta family that agreed to sell 356 acres to conservationists instead of developers.
"This is one of the most important vistas on the trail," said Jerry Seabolt, president of the Georgia Appalachian Trail Club, which celebrated the acquisition Monday.

The U.S. Forest Service has acquired the land just west of Springer Mountain, the starting point for the famous trail that runs 2,174 miles north to Maine.

About 3,000 people begin from that spot each spring, attempting to hike the entire trail. Thousands more make the 8-mile climb up Springer as a day hike.

The land, called the Glover/Little tract, has been marked as a conservation priority for 30 years, said Jim Kidd, land acquisition manager for the Chattahoochee National Forest.

"It was under dire threat to be developed," he told The Times of Gainesville, Ga. "It had been the private estate of an Atlanta family for about 100 years, basically used for hunting and camping. When the original owner died, it was divided among a number of family members, some of whom wanted it developed."

Working with conservationists, one family member, A.D. Little, agreed to buy out the other owners, then sold the property to the Forest Service. The money came from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund, which collects fees from companies that drill offshore for oil and gas.

The Forest Service paid $1.64 million, and the Georgia Land Trust Service Center chipped in $61,000.

Kidd said the Forest Service was lucky to get the tract before it was too late.

"The pressure to develop is unbelievable, and land prices have increased so much, we can't compete with developers," he said.

Fortunately, Kidd said, many property owners are interested in conservation.

"There are many families who, in their heart of hearts, don't want to see their land developed," he said. "If we can offer them a fair market value in exchange for keeping the property untouched, they'll take it."

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On the Net: Georgia Appalachian Trail Club: http://www.georgia-atclub.org (http://www.georgia-atclub.org/)

Tha Wookie
11-22-2004, 18:28
Yes!

It's about time. We in Georgia have been worried about that track for a long time.

hacksaw
11-22-2004, 18:41
This is tremendous wonderful news! I missed the sale/transfer notice. Thanks for the heads up!

Hacksaw

TDale
11-22-2004, 20:12
My tax dollars at work! Like I want them to be, for a change! GOOD JOB!!!

Rocks 'n Roots
11-24-2004, 13:14
"The pressure to develop is unbelievable, and land prices have increased so much, we can't compete with developers," he said.



The basis of the AT...

Rain Man
11-29-2004, 12:41
I was in the Greenville, SC area over Thanksgiving and read a sad article in The Greenville News about trails being closed in the Greenville County foothills to the Blue Ridge Mountains, due to private land owners selling out and inadequate State attention to the problem. For those interested, here are two links.

http://greenvilleonline.com/news/2004/11/27/2004112753927.htm
"Hikers will have to walk farther and climb steeper hills to reach a popular waterfall because a land sale has shut down the third hiking trail this year in northern Greenville County."


http://greenvilleonline.com/news/2004/11/29/2004112953977.htm
"The Rim of the Gap and John Sloan trails in the wilderness area temporarily closed earlier this year after three landowners bought private property that included sections of the trails. The same scenario played out in the fall when a landowner bought private property that included a slice of the short trail to Moonshine Falls.

"In each case, the landowners said they planned to build new homes on or near the trails."

:eek:
Rain Man

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