Posts in Winter 2019

On to 2020, A Message from TKO’s Executive Director

December 31, 2019 Posted by Newsletter, Winter 2019 0 thoughts on “On to 2020, A Message from TKO’s Executive Director”

written by Steve Kruger, Executive Director

Thank you to all of our TKO volunteers and supporters. Your remarkable contributions are building towards a trails legacy for Oregon. Your impact is making a difference to young and young at heart, including my son Van – who has grown up around this movement we are building. I have been fortunate to have him witness Trailkeepers in action, and his appreciation of what we do has grown along with him. And just like the boy, TKO is growing fast!

Click the link to hear about TKO’s 2019 impacts and what we are going after for in 2020!

On to 2019, A Letter from TKO’s Executive Director

December 30, 2018 Posted by Newsletter, Winter 2019 0 thoughts on “On to 2019, A Letter from TKO’s Executive Director”

By Steve Kruger, Executive Director, Trailkeepers of Oregon

Before the end of 2018, please consider doing the following three things:

There’s no doubt — Trailkeepers of Oregon (TKO) is on the rise. Word of our mission and dedication to the Oregon hiking experience has traveled fast, due in no small part to all of you, our supporters and volunteers.

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Hike of the Season: Samuel Boardman State Scenic Corridor

December 22, 2018 Posted by Newsletter, Winter 2019 0 thoughts on “Hike of the Season: Samuel Boardman State Scenic Corridor”

By John Sparks, Board Member, Trailkeepers of Oregon

When winter gloom broods over Oregon’s interior, it’s good to keep an eye on the weather forecast for southern Oregon Coast towns like Brookings, Gold Beach, and Port Orford.

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Trailkeepers’ Tools: The Reinhart Hoe

December 22, 2018 Posted by Newsletter, Winter 2019 0 thoughts on “Trailkeepers’ Tools: The Reinhart Hoe”

By Susan Schen, Crew Leader, Trailkeepers of Oregon

The Reinhart hoe is a tool used for grubbing, especially the digging and scraping of dirt by TKO volunteer crews to create and shape trail tread. Sometimes called a “rhino” or “bendy shovel,” the tool was invented in the 1970s by Gordon Reinhart, a fire and recreation officer with the US Forest Service on the Umatilla National Forest. The head of the tool is a square-ended curved shovel blade mounted at a 90-degree angle to the handle.

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If You Can Hike, You Can Snowshoe

December 22, 2018 Posted by Newsletter, Winter 2019 0 thoughts on “If You Can Hike, You Can Snowshoe”

By Cheryl Hill, Board Member, Trailkeepers of Oregon

When you’re longing to stretch your legs in the mountains but the trails are covered in winter snow, what’s a hiker to do? Try snowshoeing!

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After the Fire: Mika Barrett on Fighting Invasive Plants

December 22, 2018 Posted by Newsletter, Winter 2019 0 thoughts on “After the Fire: Mika Barrett on Fighting Invasive Plants”

Interview by Michael McDowell, Newsletter Editor, Trailkeepers of Oregon

The 2017 Eagle Creek Fire in the Columbia Gorge cleared the ground of vegetation in many places and opened up the canopy, inviting colonization by any species of plant able to establish itself in the ash-rich soil. In the aftermath of the fire, Friends of the Columbia Gorge have trained and sent out many volunteers to remove invasive plants and help native species reestablish themselves.

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Herb Robert: Epic Cure-All or Villain of the Piece?

December 22, 2018 Posted by Newsletter, Winter 2019 0 thoughts on “Herb Robert: Epic Cure-All or Villain of the Piece?”

By John Sparks, Board Member, Trailkeepers of Oregon

Herb Robert (Geranium robertianum) is the villain of many aliases along the scorched slopes of the Columbia Gorge now exposed to a population explosion of invasive species. This small, innocuous-looking plant with pretty pink flowers is one of several Eurasian geraniums that have established themselves in our area in the last three decades.

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Working on Trails in the Eagle Cap Wilderness

December 22, 2018 Posted by Newsletter, Winter 2019 0 thoughts on “Working on Trails in the Eagle Cap Wilderness”

By Chip Andrus, Volunteer Crew Leader, Trailkeepers of Oregon

Here we are, six volunteers with TKO, in August, trying to bring a neglected trail back to life. Built by a miner over a century ago, the Falls Creek Trail #1753 twists up the steep slopes of a canyon in the Eagle Cap Wilderness and leads to a mine shaft 3,000 feet above Hurricane Creek.

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