by Climb Nova Scotia » Tue Dec 14, 2004 10:02 am
So what have we done for access in the last year? Well I will go back a little farther than that since this year has been relatively free of issues. I do not have my notes with me so this may be a little short on names, but I believe there is a bit in here about both Main Face and LOC.
Prospect:
Last year a news paper article about bouldering in Prospect caused a stir when a woman contacted CNS claiming to represent The Friends Of The High Head and another prominent environmental group. She claimed that climbers were trespassing on private land at Prospect and that it was illegal to climb at Peggys Cove. I researched the land ownership and found that the road right-of-way for the Indian Point Road goes all the way down to the stream and that the land we climb on was owned by an environmental organization with the land between owned by HRM. I contacted the treasurer of The Friends Of The High Head to find out what was going on and listened to their concerns. They helped me get in touch with a representative of the organization which owned the land. He agreed that since there is no soil where we climb that climbing was not impacting the environment at Prospect. Our only impact is on the hike in, where we are the same as any other hiker or dog walker. It was made clear to me that climbers should park on the side of the Indian Point road and not block driveways. I passed this information along to our membership on the discussion board.
LOC:
When it was stated that it was illegal to climb in the Peggys Cove area, I did some research to find out if this was true. From my reading of the Peggys Cove act it does not seem to be illegal to climb there, although the building of structures without permission from the Peggys Cove commission is prohibited, which means we can not build board walks in some areas as we would like. It turned out that the woman who contacted CNS with these concerns did not represent the organizations she claimed to represent. CNS later received an apology from one of the organizations for the trouble she caused.
Sorrows End:
The owner of the gravel pit built a house which blocked our access to the trails leading to Sorrows End. The alterative route from Nice View Drive was long, particularly since locals had asked that we park at the end of Nice View and walk in. Some people were driving in, and some people were taking the shorter route and cutting across peoples yards. This situation was both inconvenient for climbers and quickly leading to major conflict with the locals. So I did some research into land ownership in the area and then went out on foot and bush-waked until I was able to mark out a route for a trail which was entirely on Crown Land from the road to the cliff. This avoids further access problems and is about the same distance as the original route through the gravel pit. I read the Crown Land Act carefully and the Trails Act to make sure there was no problem with climbers using this route.
Main Face:
When the owner of half of Main Face (CNS has an agreement with the person who owns the other half) was upset about climbers lighting a camp fire, I contacted him to discuss the issue. I made it clear that such behaviour was not condoned by CNS and was frowned on by most experienced climbers. I agreed to post on the CNS bulletin board and in our news letter that lighting of fires on private land could threaten access to cliffs and would not be tolerated by the climbing community. The land owner was satisfied with this. He mainly wanted to make sure that climbers respect his land and having me contact him when he had a concern gave him an avenue to complain about the actions of individuals rather than taking actions which would effect the entire climbing community. He commented that climbers have been good about packing out their garbage at Main Face, and we ended the conversation on a positive note. It turns out he owns Columbus Wall too, so maintaining good relations helped to maintain access to two prominent climbing walls (or possibly three, as the Bow Wall has the same access point).
Cape Breton Highlands National Park:
Climbing was banned in the park in 2003 because the park officials did not have the time and interest to come up with a way of managing it. CNS contacted park officials and it was agreed that CNS would work with the park to reopen some areas for climbing. Things started to drag out a little so this Spring I decided to take a more aggressive approach. I wrote a climbing management plan for the park, designed around the management zones in their Park Management Plan. I applied a bit of pressure on them to do implement it. They responded by assigning a park official with some climbing experience to work with us to do cliff assessments. We were a matter of days away from having Climb Nova Scotia’s Cape Breton representative and the park official assess Black Brook in preparation for reopening it to the public, when the Federal park employees went on strike. Suddenly our park management contact was busy trying to keep the park running with no staff, which sort of derailed the process. I will try to get things going again this winter with hopes of at least getting Black Brook open for the spring climbing season.
Other than CBHNP we have not had very many issues this year, which has allowed us to tackle some of the lower priority stuff that we have been putting off for a while. The access fund is an interesting idea. I will have to find out if saving large amounts of money will effect our not for profit status or our funding. (Then I might have to think about where to get large amounts of money.) I would not call the money we have been giving out to people “a lot”. It would not buy a parking space, much less a cliff. I also believe that supporting the production of high quality guide books is beneficial to the climbing community, and as far as supporting profit making ventures, making money off of climbing in Nova Scotia is like trying to squeeze blood from a stone. These people are doing what they do to provide a service and struggle just to break even. No one is getting rich off of climbing in this province.
Teth Cleveland, President of Climb Nova Scotia