kasilofchrisn
Well-known member
Surprisingly, I have to say I agree with you on this one Mark.There is nothing any of us can do. Roads will be built and people will use them. I, for one are for roads to lands in Alaska that is not already protected. Why, because those areas are already protected.
We keep making more people and if we are going to make more people, those people are going to need places to live, work and play.
If we keep making more people but don't open up access to land for them to live, work and play, (land that has already been set aside for those things and not preservation in this case) we are all going to be splitting up the places that we already have with more people. Our individual slices of the pie all become smaller, society becomes poorer as a whole, more people are crowded into what's available.
Originally, the haul road was meant for only pipeline access. Now it's used for all kinds of great things. Mostly, it allows us to spread out a little. We have more access to more places to live, work and play, and it's affordable.
I have noticed some of the people that are against the Ambler road, and roads like it, already live in, or access those places in other ways and are trying to limit access by other people. I don't see anything wrong with that, it's human nature.
Since there have been human beings, we have been spreading out. That's a fact.
You are not going to stop it. IMO.
I for one do not own a team of pack horses that can get me back into these remote areas.
Putting a road like this through it opens up so many points of access for so many Alaskans.
After the first mile or two, there isn't really anybody who's going to be packing a moose out of any further than that.
Sure you could always get flown into one of these rivers and float your way out but, that isn't cheap either.
I'm not saying we need all kinds of spurs or side roads and/or that we should allow Atvs etc.
But having a main access road up that way opens up so many possibilities for hunting and fishing.
How many people come to Alaska each year seeking peace and solitude only to find themselves combat fishing on the Kenai or jam pack in a stuffy crowded bus going up the road through Denali?
I think we've all had those days where we went out thinking we would be in an area by ourselves only to run into other people out in the wilderness.
A few more roads could certainly help us spread out in Alaska without have to pack a moose or caribou 20 miles on our backs!