Posted 3/15/01
Guest Commentary: Snowmobiler thanks land owners
By John T. Prusak,
with permission of Snowmobile Magazine
They are the totally forgotten saviors of our sport, generous folks who may or may not understand snowmobiling, but people who care enough about others and their hobbies to allow our sport to exist.
Iím talking about private land owners - nameless, faceless people to most of us, owners of farms and homes, estates and businesses whose property many of us cross every time we go out snowmobiling.
The on-going battle over access to public lands has stolen a lot of headlines. Yes, we must defend our rights to ride in national parks, national forests and state and locally-owned lands. Yes, they are owned by the people, for the people and of the people, and we shouldnít be excluded because some folks with bad science and outlandish statistics have political clout.
That issue is particularly important in Western states. Did you know that 91 percent of all snowmobile trails in the West are on public lands? Itís true.
At the same time, however, we must never lose sight of the private land owners who make our sport possible across the country. In the Northeast, 70 percent of all trails are on privately owned lands and 72 percent of Midwestern trails are on private lands.
So if you ride 150 miles on a Saturday in the Northeast or Midwest, you are likely spending 105 miles on somebody elseís property. There are likely hundreds of people who signed land leases to allow access to their land so you and your friends can snowmobile on a given day.
Why do they do it? Itís not for the money. If they get paid for access to their property, land owners must then assume the risk for anything that happens on their property. If they sign over access to a strip of that property to a snowmobile club, however, the club accepts the risk and buys the insurance.
The landowners also donít do it for the notoriety. Do you know who lives in the yellow house with the white picket fence when you go blitzing by at 50 mph? Of course not. Youíre only on that personís land for 10 seconds, then youíre on to somebody elseís property, and then somebody elseís. And thatís part of the challenge that our sport faces.
The common snowmobiler doesnít know any of these people, and some snowmobilers donít even respect these people.
Youíve seen it: hardcore sledheads who think theyíre real tough guys when they launch over a snowbank, smack onto somebodyís driveway and then spin their studded track as they accelerate toward the snowbank on the other side. Youíve also seen the tracks of senseless snowmobilers who leave the trail in search of powder, carving a path past the ìStay on Trailî sign, across somebodyís front yard or farm field. Or the people with the loud pipes who roar through residential areas with their sleds screaming out a nasty song.
Obviously these people are in the minority. The vast majority of snowmobilers have common sense and respect other peopleís property. But sometimes, even these people surprise me - some people, when they put on a helmet, their calm persona disappears. Suddenly, theyíre not Dr. Jones, the friendly pharmacist - theyíre Ricky Racer, faster than their buddies and always willing to prove it.
But remember, if that one person who owns the yellow house with the picket fence decided that heís had enough of the hot rodders, sky pilots and powder chasers, he could deny access to his land. And if thereís no viable alternative around his property, that could shut down a huge section of trail.
So, on behalf of all snowmobilers, I would like to give a very heartfelt ìThank Youî to the land owners. And I ask you to extend a ìThank Youî yourself, but following the rules, respecting their property rights and doing the right thing this winter. Our sport depends on it.
Shared by Leo Johnson of the North Branch SnoDrifters
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