Sam Salman can鈥檛 recall the exact words that fell out of his mouth when he first saw the U.S. Forest Service map. Salman, however, remembers this: it felt like a shot to the gut.听
The map outlined several in North Carolina鈥檚 Pisgah and Nantahala National Forests鈥攐ne of which was just a short pedal from The Hub, Salman鈥檚 bike shop. If the USFS cordoned off those areas as wilderness, mountain bikers would lose access to a chunk of the region鈥檚, and arguable the country鈥檚, best mountain biking.听
As an avid rider, Salman feared the loss of his favorite trails. As a businessman, Salman feared the loss of his livelihood. 鈥淚t would absolutely level this store,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople come from all over to ride those trails. This shop鈥攈eck, this county鈥攏eeds those people.鈥
If this were the typical story about mountain bikes and wilderness, there鈥檇 be no happy ending for Salman. But this isn鈥檛 that story. Not yet at least. In December, an unlikely coalition of conservationists, recreational groups, and business interests advocating for more wilderness and more mountain biking access in western North Carolina鈥檚 forests. Thirty-four individuals, representing everyone from the to , have signed the MOU. The proposal calls for both adding 109,961 acres of new wilderness and creating two new National Recreation Areas, totaling 217,000 acres, on which many of Pisgah鈥檚 best known mountain bike trails are located. 聽
The forces so often at odds with one another over America鈥檚 wilderness areas have come together and agreed to share the forests. Now, they just need to convince the USFS that they鈥檝e created a plan worth backing.
Federal law requires that the USFS routinely re-evaluate its holdings to determine, among other things, which properties are ideal candidates for future wilderness designations. The goal is laudable: to ensure that a growing America also grows its wildest places.听
A few years ago, the USFS turned its attention to the Pisgah and Nantahala forests. The first step鈥攚hich birthed the map in question鈥攚as to inventory potential wilderness areas in this corner of the Appalachians. The next step, still in progress, is to evaluate those parcels.听
But while the Blue Ridge Mountains are renowned for their beauty, they鈥檙e not so famous for their career opportunities. Consider Brevard, where Salman鈥檚 bike shop is based. The town of roughly 8,000 sits on Pisgah National Forest鈥檚 back porch, within easy reach of a million acres and hundreds of miles of trail. It鈥檚 an outdoor paradise, but until recently, if you wanted to earn a living, your options were largely limited to cutting down said forest, and turning those trees into paper at the Ecusta Paper Mill, or working the floor at either the local textile factory or Dupont鈥檚 film plant. In 2002, the mill and both factories went belly up, leaving one in ten people in Transylvania County jobless.
鈥淚t鈥檚 truly a win-win situation.听This allows us to add the highest level of protection possible to the parts of Pisgah and聽Nantahala聽best suited to it, while still allowing for mountain biking in places where it鈥檚 been popular for decades.鈥
In recent years, the focus around these parts has been less on cutting down the forests and more on attracting people to play in them. Brevard and nearby Asheville have morphed into magnets for outdoor lovers. Mountain bikers, in particular, routinely flock to the region from throughout the East Coast, eager to lay tire to Pisgah鈥檚 famous singletrack trails.听
That all helps explain the furor that erupted when the USFS map first rolled out, outlining 362,411 acres of Wilderness Inventory Areas. Some of Pisgah鈥檚 most iconic mountain biking trails were tied up in those spots, including Laurel Mountain, Pilot Rock, Daniel Ridge, Farlow Gap, Squirrel Gap, and Black Mountain.听
In 1984, the Forest Service prohibited mountain biking in its wilderness properties. In recent years, the Forest Service ban has frequently extended the biking ban to potential wilderness additions known as . The relationship between some mountain bikers and members of wilderness advocates has, not surprisingly, grown increasingly .听
What is surprising, given that bad blood, is the MOU.听
鈥淚t鈥檚 truly a win-win situation,鈥 says Tom Sauret, executive director of , the southeastern division of the International Mountain Bicycling Association. 鈥淭his allows us to add the highest level of protection possible to the parts of Pisgah and Nantahala best suited to it, while still allowing for mountain biking in places where it鈥檚 been popular for decades. It鈥檚 proof that we can work together.鈥
The 鈥渨e鈥 Sauret refers to includes the Wilderness Society, which has not, historically, been a champion of mountain biking in America鈥檚 wilderness. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e trying to do here is protect a very special place,鈥 says Brent Martin, southern Appalachian regional director of the. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e going to do that, we have to stop looking at one another as enemies. We can oppose each other and gain nothing or we can build the middle鈥攁 bigger constituency for the environment鈥攁nd gain so much more.鈥
Building the middle, however, is no easy task. Not everyone agrees with the MOU. Hunting groups, who generally favor the logging that creates optimal conditions for deer and grouse hunting, contend that the plan doesn鈥檛 allow for enough timber harvesting. Likewise, while the coalition includes several environmental organizations, not everyone in the conservation community is comfortable with the compromise.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been a challenge. There are always people who feel that any kind of concession equals a defeat,鈥 explains Josh Kelly, a field biologist at , a North Carolina-based conservation group that helped piece the partnership together. 鈥淏ut we feel that this plan provides an excellent balance of environmental protection and recreation, which is vital to this area and to actually creating a solution that stands a chance.鈥澛
To date, the USFS鈥攃ommitted to its own deliberation process that鈥檚 slated to end in 2017鈥攈as not responded to the coalition鈥檚 MOU. In the meantime, the MOU hangs out there as tantalizing proof that competing interest groups can bury the hatchet for the greater good.听
What are the odds that the USFS will adopt all, or even some, of the coalition鈥檚 MOU in its final Forest Plan? It鈥檚 anyone鈥檚 guess. Back in his Brevard bike shop, however, Sam Salman is hopeful.听
鈥淭he momentum behind this alliance is unbelievable,鈥 says Salman. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 really what we need, some give and take, instead of an all-or-nothing situation. We need wilderness here, absolutely, but let鈥檚 put it in places where it makes the most sense.鈥