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Wild Rogue Wilderness Proposal

The Zane Grey BLM roadless area is the largest of its kind in the nation. This southwest Oregon wildland encompasses the famous Rogue River but is threatened with destruction from bulldozers and chainsaws.

Pristine Wildlands and Waterways Need Permanent Protection

 

Zane Grey and Rogue RiverThe Wild Rogue area is one of Oregon’s most pristine, scenic, and rugged landscapes. Located in Southern Oregon and nestled in the Siskiyou Mountain Range, the Wild Rogue area is home to the famous Rogue River. The area is one of the state’s premier recreational spots, attracting tens of thousands of visitors every year and contributing millions of dollars to the local economy. The Wild Rogue also provides important salmon and steelhead spawning and rearing habitat, providing the backbone for one of Oregon’s most important sport and commercial fisheries.

But the Wild Rogue is threatened.

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is threatening to turn bulldozers and chainsaws loose in pristine old-growth forests in a portion of the Wild Rogue area called the Zane Grey Roadless Area. The BLM's reckless logging scheme, called the Kelsey-Whisky project (click here for pdf map), would build new roads into the roadless area and allow loggers to clear-cut hundreds of acres of pristine wildlands.

Wild Rogue Map

That's why Oregon Wild is part of the Save the Wild Rogue Coalition, a diverse group of conservation organizations and recreation-based businesses working to a secure permanent protection for one of Oregon's wildest, most scenic, and most enjoyed landscapes.  We're proposing approximately 58,000 acres of new Wilderness areas and 143 miles of new Wild and Scenic Rivers.  This map (3mb pdf), created by Oregon Wild, shows the areas proposed for protection. 

Take Action!

Please take a moment to urge your Congressional representatives to "Save the Wild Rogue" by clicking here.

Links

 

Whisky Creek -Zane Grey

 

Photos courtesy of Dang Ngo and Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center

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Overheard...

"We simply need that wild country available to us, even if we never do more than drive to its edge and look in. For it can be a means of reassuring ourselves of our sanity as creatures, a part of the geography of hope."
        -- Wallace Stegner, the Wilderness Letter

 

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