[Az-Geocaching] Duquesne

Andrew Ayre andy at britishideas.com
Wed Nov 14 11:35:08 MST 2007


So maybe I am asking the wrong question. Perhaps it should be:

Why is the Forest Service (Sierra Vista district and Coronado HQ in
downtown Tucson) so hopeless that they cannot give me any kind of
answer? The HQ put me through to the voice mail of an archaeologist to
try and answer my question!?

Don't they know which laws/agreements cover what in the forest they manage?

Andy

ShadowAce wrote:
> The best answer is that will be between you, the property owner and the
> Santa Cruz County Sheriff department.
> 
>  According to the USDA Forest service website:
> 
> Obtain a map of the area you wish to explore and determine which areas
> are open for use.
> 
>     * *Contact the land manager for area restrictions and if crossing
>       private property, be sure to ask permission from the land owner.* 
> 
> So I would say yes, according to the forest service, a private property
> owner can block access even on a forest road.
> 
>  I know of a road in Tucson city limits that is state trust land. The
> lease owner has padlocked the road and even the state trust trespassing
> officers do not have a key, they find another way into the area.
> 
>  North of Tucson are BLM and State Trust roads that have fences and
> locks on them to block access.
> 
>  Long and short again would be... Do you feel it is worth your time in
> court if the Sheriff is brought into this and just think of the
> excitement it could be for your European friends :)
> 
> On Nov 14, 2007 11:02 AM, Andrew Ayre <andy at britishideas.com
> <mailto:andy at britishideas.com>> wrote:
> 
>     Thanks for the reply.
> 
>     I hate to sound like a nutcase... ;) but if the road is public then we
>     have a right to drive on it, despite what the current owners would like.
>     The public who pay for the road shouldn't be scared off by a few people
>     who bought the town. So the issue is: do we have a right to drive
>     through there?
> 
>     I know there are many cases in southern Arizona where a public road
>     crosses private property. Is this one of those cases?
> 
>     If a forest road is numbered, does that mean it is public?
> 
>     Andy
> 
> 
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> ____________________________________________________________
> Az-Geocaching mailing list listserv at azgeocaching.com
> To edit your setting, subscribe or unsubscribe visit:
> http://listserv.azgeocaching.com/mailman/listinfo/az-geocaching
> 
> Arizona's Geocaching Resource
> http://www.azgeocaching.com

-- 
Andy
PGP Key ID: 0x67090A54


More information about the Az-Geocaching mailing list