Below our Rec Ranger, Matt Kusper, outlines the maintenance that has been completed by our passionate volunteers on 12.79 miles of footpath. THANK YOU to our nine volunteer section maintainers!
Recreation Ranger Contributions
At the start of the season, I began my work on the trail by completing trail assessments along the Saddleback Spur and from the Cascade Stream Gorge trailhead to City Pond to document locations where maintenance efforts should be directed in the future.
I cleared all blowdowns within the Cascade Stream section to City Pond and cleared the corridor of overgrowth. Additionally, I brushed in social trails within Rangeley Lakes Heritage Trust’s portion of Cascade Stream and also routinely cleared the grassy section at the junction with the emergency access trail with a weedeater.
Throughout two separate outings, Brent and I cleared blowdowns and lopped overgrowth starting from half a mile east of the junction with the Berry Picker’s Trail to Reeds Mill Road. This portion of the trail had many blowdowns and debris from the flooding event back in December of 2023.
Down in Phillips, at the .85 mile section of single-track hiking trail adjacent to the Sandy River and Rangeley Lakes Railroad, I cleared all blowdowns and widened the corridor with a weedeater and loppers. Due to the trail’s proximity to the Sandy River, there is an extensive amount of flooding debris where water reached above my head last December. Much of the vegetation along the trail includes ostrich ferns and poison ivy which had to be trimmed back several times this season.
I consolidated all of the non-natural debris from the December flooding I could find.
The Beginning of the Rec Ranger Corps
Two volunteer workdays were scheduled for the season. The first was to take place within the Cascade Stream Gorge section on June 22nd. However, due to heavy rain, no volunteers made it out to the trailhead.
Our second volunteer event took place on August 24th and participants included myself and three volunteers. We utilized Lloyd Griscom’s Kubota to reach the Horse Hobbles where we worked our way south clearing the corridor of overgrowth and installing several sections of stepping stones in perpetually wet locations. We worked almost to the Hardy Stream overlook before returning to the ATV.
Thank you to these Rec Rangers
- Bob Greene, section maintainer of the Saddleback Spur, made three solo outings onto the trail to clear blowdowns after significant wind events. On August 10th, Bob led a group of six volunteers carrying in planks to build bog bridging near Rock Pond. The volunteers also helped construct the bridge and weed-eat the grassy section at the beginning of the trail. One day while opening the log book box at the kiosk, Bob was stung by yellow jackets and removed the nest from the box, keeping future hikers from suffering the same fate.
- Nini Christensen, another dedicated volunteer, took a young group of outdoor enthusiasts out on the trail with loppers to cut back overgrowth within the corridor.
- Carl Hardy and his wife made six visits during the summer and early autumn to his section spanning from the confluence of Perham Stream and Orbeton Stream to the Reeds Mill Loop. Their time was spent cutting back tall grass and brambles and sticking tipped-over blazed posts back in the ground.
- Ben Godsoe, maintainer of the section from the Hardy Stream cutoff to the confluence of Orebeton and Perham Stream, completed two trips to his section, one in January and one in November. He described the scene in January as a “horror show” after blowdowns and debris deposited by the December flooding consolidated into walls of logs across several portions of the trail. On both visits, he cleared back overgrowth within the corridor with loppers.
- Adam O’Neal hiked from the Saddleback Spur to the Reeds Mill loop to document trail conditions earlier this summer. However, he was unable to perform maintenance on his section from Cascade Gorge to City Pond due to a wood splitter accident that claimed part of one of his fingers.
- Sam Shirley was able to visit his section, Berry Picker’s Trail to Horse Hobbles, on October 28th with the help of Lloyd and his ATV. Sam reported no blowdowns too big to handle with small hand tools and that the trail was in pretty good shape except for a few wet spots.
- Anna Plog, a maintainer of the Reeds Mill Loop, is busy with family and finishing up a degree at UMF but has requested to be kept in the loop on future volunteer outings.
- On December 4th, I was joined by John Rogers and Paul Kennedy at the Sandy River section in Phillips to haul out the debris from the flooding that I had consolidated into two piles. Fortunately, the snow wasn’t deep enough to require excessive post-holing.
Future Considerations
Based on my observations, the Fly Rod Crosby Trail could use some re-blazing where old blazes are fading, better posts for blazes where no suitable trees for blazing are present, stepping stones in wet areas, and replacement of decrepit sections of bog bridging. Two very steep locations between Cascade Stream Gorge and City Pond would easily become severely eroded if foot traffic were to significantly increase.
I plan on hiking the entire footpath to produce a trail assessment to prescribe future trail maintenance efforts and to take care of minor fixes myself such as blazing. More importantly, I am in the process of establishing a volunteer framework plan that will establish uniform maintenance standards, volunteer organizational structure, and prioritization of maintenance.
The bridge across Orebeton Stream is a big setback not only for volunteers but also for those wishing to access the Berry Picker’s Trail. Until it is completed, we will almost entirely have to rely on Lloyd Griscom, Alliance president, and his ATVs to access much of the trail for volunteer outings.