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Icecream Rolls World 🍦
Icecream Rolls World 🍦
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Tuesday 10 December 2024 08:41:42 GMT
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Arizona’s roadless areas are at risk - the USDA is threatening to rescind the Roadless Rule. The public comment period opened TODAY and is only open until September 19.  Use your voice and submit a comment. Use the l!nk in my b!o to submit a comment!  Arizona’s 1.17 million acres of roadless areas are some of the wildest, most irreplaceable lands in the stateand they protect far more than just beautiful views. They span every corner of our public lands: 🌵 Tonto National Forest – The Arizona Trail winds through the Mazatzal and Boulder IRAs, the Goldfield IRA borders Saguaro Lake, and the Picacho IRA lines the Salt River, offering epic backdrops for hikers, boaters, and campers. 🏜 Kaibab National Forest – Roadless stretches on the North Rim connect Grand Canyon National Park to Vermilion Cliffs and Grand Staircase-Escalante, creating vital wildlife corridors for species like elk, mountain lions, and bighorn sheep. 🏞 Coronado National Forest – The Whetstone Mountains IRA protects the uplands feeding Kartchner Caverns, a living cave system still forming and home to rare, newly discovered species. This forest’s IRAs also anchor the Sky Islands, a biodiversity hotspot where jaguars and ocelots roam. 🌲 Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest – Roadless areas around the Blue Range Primitive Area are part of the largest unroaded landscape in the lower 48, home to wolves, trout streams, and over 400 species of wildlife. These areas are also natural wildfire buffers. Fires start 6x more often near roads than in roadless areas. Once a road is built, the impacts are permanent: habitat fragmentation, invasive species, and loss of the solitude that makes these places so special. Once these wild places are gone, they’re gone forever. Let’s keep Arizona wild, connected, and roadless. Content and video prepared and owned by Ashley Goes Hiking. This work is self-supported and I have never been paid for any of my advocacy posts or content. These words and views are my own personal views.
Arizona’s roadless areas are at risk - the USDA is threatening to rescind the Roadless Rule. The public comment period opened TODAY and is only open until September 19. Use your voice and submit a comment. Use the l!nk in my b!o to submit a comment! Arizona’s 1.17 million acres of roadless areas are some of the wildest, most irreplaceable lands in the stateand they protect far more than just beautiful views. They span every corner of our public lands: 🌵 Tonto National Forest – The Arizona Trail winds through the Mazatzal and Boulder IRAs, the Goldfield IRA borders Saguaro Lake, and the Picacho IRA lines the Salt River, offering epic backdrops for hikers, boaters, and campers. 🏜 Kaibab National Forest – Roadless stretches on the North Rim connect Grand Canyon National Park to Vermilion Cliffs and Grand Staircase-Escalante, creating vital wildlife corridors for species like elk, mountain lions, and bighorn sheep. 🏞 Coronado National Forest – The Whetstone Mountains IRA protects the uplands feeding Kartchner Caverns, a living cave system still forming and home to rare, newly discovered species. This forest’s IRAs also anchor the Sky Islands, a biodiversity hotspot where jaguars and ocelots roam. 🌲 Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest – Roadless areas around the Blue Range Primitive Area are part of the largest unroaded landscape in the lower 48, home to wolves, trout streams, and over 400 species of wildlife. These areas are also natural wildfire buffers. Fires start 6x more often near roads than in roadless areas. Once a road is built, the impacts are permanent: habitat fragmentation, invasive species, and loss of the solitude that makes these places so special. Once these wild places are gone, they’re gone forever. Let’s keep Arizona wild, connected, and roadless. Content and video prepared and owned by Ashley Goes Hiking. This work is self-supported and I have never been paid for any of my advocacy posts or content. These words and views are my own personal views.

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