Final Recreation Report. Sunflower Allotment Grazing Analysis. July 2015

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Final Recreation Report Sunflower Allotment Grazing Analysis July 2015

Table of Contents Introduction... 3 Affected Environment... 3 Four Peaks Wilderness Area... 3 Dispersed Recreation... 3 Environmental Consequences... 5 Legal and Regulatory Compliance... 5 Assumptions and Methodology... 6 Alternative 1... 6 Alternative 2... 6 Page 2 of 7

Introduction The Sunflower Allotment consists of a variety of natural settings, each with specific features and unique characteristics enjoyed by recreationists from all over the country. The Four Peaks Wilderness Area is popular for hikers, photographers, horseback riders, and anyone wanting a good look at the beauty of the natural outdoors. Ranging from 1,600 feet to more than 7,000 feet in elevation, this wilderness area experiences a range of weather seasons and biological environments. Recreationists visit the Mesa Ranger District dispersed camping areas for a wide variety of recreation opportunities including hiking, camping, horseback riding, mountain biking, picnicking, wildlife viewing, hunting, target shooting, off-highway vehicle (OHV) use, and scenic driving. Other features that add value to this recreation setting include spectacular views, amazing geology, archaeological sites and ruins, rare wildlife, and historic buildings. Highway 87 runs through the middle of the allotment, providing thousands of people with access to Forest Service roads, trails, and even lakes. One of Arizona s busiest and closest lakes to Phoenix, Saguaro Lake, lies just outside the southern border of the Sunflower Allotment, along with Canyon and Apache Lakes. This greatly impacts the variety of users that choose to recreate within the allotment. Affected Environment Four Peaks Wilderness Area Approximately 80 percent of the Four Peaks Wilderness Area lies within the Sunflower Allotment. Saguaro, Canyon, and Apache Lakes border the south side of the wilderness area, while dispersed recreation areas occupy the remaining boundaries. Magnificent cliffs on the south side of the Four Peaks Wilderness area prevent many recreationists from venturing into the area. However, three trailheads to the north and west encourage hikers and horseback recreationists to explore the wilderness trails in the spring and fall seasons. The Four Peaks Wilderness area receives several feet of snowfall every winter season, increasing visitation by recreationists. With Forest Roads 143 and 401 being the only main roads that access the wilderness area, winter visitation mainly consists of photographers and other low-impact recreationists. There is currently only 1 authorized guiding service for horseback within this wilderness area. With a heavily used OHV area to the west of the Four Peaks Wilderness area, multiple perimeter fences have been damaged and breached by OHV riders, resulting in ground disturbances and vegetation damage within the wilderness area. Target shooting pits near the wilderness boundary have also resulted in damage to signs, cacti, and other vegetation. Dispersed Recreation The nonwilderness areas of the Sunflower Allotment are primarily used for dispersed recreation. This consists of OHV use, overnight camping, target shooting, hunting, and wildlife observing. Overnight camping areas commonly have abandoned fire rings and garbage left behind from the user. Wildlife observers have little impact on the land as they tend to stay close to roads and trails, if not remaining in their vehicle. Hunters also have little impact on the land and their use is Page 3 of 7

monitored by the Arizona Game and Fish Department. There are currently 11 outfitting and guiding companies authorized in Management Area 3I to conduct hiking, horseback, OHV, and/or mountain biking tours. These companies consume less than half of the maximum service day allocations set in the Tonto Forest Land Management Plan. The Desert Unit and Dos S Unit (Adams Pasture West) are commonly known as The Rolls, a popular OHV and target shooting area for the Phoenix metro area, and Sycamore Creek recreation areas. Designated Forest Roads are marked and mapped with designated parking areas available to park trailers and less-capable vehicles. However, The Rolls and Sycamore Creek are losing vegetation and healthy soil due to a system of user-made roads that are increasing daily. Once a road has developed a rut or other inconvenient feature, OHV recreationists create another route parallel to it to get around the feature. This has caused the surface area of roads and trails to increase, diminishing the amount of healthy vegetation in the area. A satellite picture of the areas shows a spider effect of roads and trails being created around designated Forest Roads (see Exhibit A). Some of these trails were created by cutting fences to get to an area previously closed to OHV traffic. The high numbers of recreationists present in The Rolls and Sycamore Creek recreation areas have also caused widening of roads and trails to accommodate for two-way traffic. These user-made roads and trails have also increased the area s surface water run-off. Butcher Jones Wash is a common route for recreationists that runs south through The Rolls and dumps into Saguaro Lake. Along the beach of Saguaro Lake is a developed recreation site, popular for picnicking and hiking, and serves as an access point for The Rolls. In 2012, 2013, and 2014, heavy monsoonal rains caused abnormal amounts of run-off to flood Butcher Jones Recreation Site, which had to be temporarily closed due to road damage and facility flooding. User-made target shooting pits are also very common in The Rolls and Sycamore Creek recreation areas. Recreationists haul large household items to the Forest, such as couches, refrigerators, old television sets, and other household items, and use them for target shooting practice. These items and their broken pieces are then left behind as litter, along with bullets and empty shell casings. The Mesa Ranger District holds an annual volunteer cleanup in the Four Peaks Dispersed Recreation Area to help clean up target shooting pits and encourage future users to pack out their targets. Target shooting can also cause the start of a wildland fire. In 2012, nine wildfires started within the area of a heavily used target shooting pit on the Mesa Ranger District. Two of those wildfires were determined to be caused by target shooting, and one of those wildfires grew to more than 17,000 acres. Every year during the extremely dry season (approximately May through July), fire restrictions go into effect on the Tonto National Forest, limiting the use of target shooting, campfires, and other activities involving fire or sparks. Despite these restrictions, small (less than five acres) wildland fires are commonly found and managed in dispersed recreation areas throughout the summer season. The Rolls and Sycamore Creek recreation areas are the first Forest areas accessible from Phoenix on Highway 87. This leads to public dumping at the staging areas and along Forest roads just off the highway. Other dispersed recreation areas further north on Highway 87, such as Mesquite Wash, are also common for trash dumping. Page 4 of 7

Environmental Consequences Legal and Regulatory Compliance The Sunflower Allotment consists of four management areas of the Tonto National Forest: Management Areas 3D, 3I, 3E, and 3H. These areas are managed as follows: In the Tonto Forest Land Management Plan, Management Area 3D (Four Peaks Wilderness) is to be managed for wilderness values, wildlife habitats and natural ecological processes while allowing livestock grazing and recreation opportunities that are compatible with maintaining these values and processes. All wilderness boundaries are to be signed, posted, and barricaded to prevent trespass. In the Four Peaks Wilderness, OHV use is prohibited and outfitter-guide service allocations consist of the following: Table 1. Outfitter-guide Service Allocation in Four Peaks Wilderness Area Type of Service Class of Permits No. of Permits Maximum Service Days Per Permit Total Service Days Per Year Horse/Mule Hiking Priority Priority 3 3 300 600 Hunting Temporary 60 60 3,600 In Management Area 3I (General Management Area), the emphasis is to manage for a variety of renewable natural resources with primary emphasis on improvement of wildlife habitat, livestock forage production, and dispersed recreation. One percent of the area is to be managed under the primitive recreation opportunity class (ROS), 42 percent is under the semiprimitive nonmotorized ROS, 36 percent is under the semiprimitive motorized ROS, and 21 percent is under the roaded natural ROS. Definitions of these ROSs can be found in Exhibit B. Overall, this means Management Area 3I should be managed to have a natural-appearing environment with low to moderate interaction between users. Onsite controls and resource modifications are subtle and should harmonize with the natural environment. Outfitter-guide service allocations in this Management Area consist of the following: Table 2. Outfitter-guide Service Allocations in Management Area 3I Type of Service Riding/ Packing Stock Hiking Hunting Motorized Off- Highway Vehicle Tours Class of Permit Temporary Pool Number of Permits 7 7 12 Maximum Service Days Per Permit 0 Total Service Days Per Year 3,0 1,400 60 60 3,600 0 6,000 Page 5 of 7

Type of Service Class of Permit Number of Permits Maximum Service Days Per Permit Total Service Days Per Year Other 5 0 Recreation in Management Areas 3E and 3H (Bush Highway Research Natural Area and Proposed Sycamore Creek Natural Area) is currently being managed similar to Management Area 3I. The Tonto Forest Land Management Plan currently directs to prohibit OHV use in these areas and manage for low intensity dispersed recreation. However, Management Areas 3E and 3H are abundant with OHV recreational use, overnight camping, and target shooting. Assumptions and Methodology The following environmental effects are based on several outside assumptions. First, it is assumed that the economy will remain in its current condition so that the demand for off-highway vehicles and areas to recreate with them will remain consistent with the last five years. Second, Arizona s annual weather will be consistent with the past five years. This includes sunny days throughout most of the year, monsoon storms in the summer season, and light snow and precipitation in the winter season. Third, the management of areas 3E and 3H will remain the same, which is similar to Management Area 3I, a general management area. Fourth, current services provided by the agency in the Sunflower Allotment Area will remain the same, such as law enforcement presence, road maintenance, and no trash service at OHV areas. The quantity and type of outfitting-guiding operations provided within the allotment must also remain the same. The environmental effects also assume that every forest user is to abide by Federal Regulations while on National Forest Lands. Travel Management is currently under review and expected to be enforced on the Tonto National Forest by 2015. This program will reduce the number of user-made OHV roads and improve the quality of the natural environment by encouraging recreationists to stay on designated Forest Service roads and trails. The following environmental effects assume that travel management will be implemented on the Tonto National Forest by 2015. Alternative 1 Alternative 1 calls for no action/no grazing in the Sunflower Allotment. Based on current use of minimal to no grazing, this alternative should not affect recreational use on the Mesa Ranger District. The removal of grazing fences and cattle guards may go unnoticed by recreationists in both wilderness and nonwilderness areas. Alternative 2 Alternative 2 proposes the introduction of 2,700 AUMs to 6,300 AUMs year-long to the Sunflower Allotment, excluding the Desert Unit, Dos S Unit (Adams Pasture West), and Dos S Unit (Otero Pasture). Placing these three units in non-use should not affect the recreational uses and activities occurring there. The addition of cattle to the remaining units may affect Forest users. This alternative will increase the number of recreationists/cattle encounters in both the wilderness and nonwilderness areas, and it is unpredictable whether the majority of recreationists will embrace the presence of cattle or object to it. Recreationists may be visually impacted by Page 6 of 7

cattle grazing near them, but only temporarily as the herds move regularly and are on a rotational schedule between the different pastures. Areas with the most visual impact will be near water sources 1. Additional cattle in the Sunflower Allotment may encourage recreationists to be more responsible in the natural environment. Viewing a herd graze near a populated recreation area may prevent users from leaving litter on the ground, shooting in unsafe areas, and wandering off designated roads and trails. However, there may be a few recreationists that find cattle interesting, and attempt to antagonize the cattle when the rancher is not present. Alternative 2 also includes the installation of several water tanks, troughs, pipeline, and fencing throughout the allotment. The installation of stock tanks and watering troughs may be useful for horseback and hunting recreationists. However, the addition of pipeline and fencing often becomes a challenge for target shooters to shoot at, while OHV users may damage it in an attempt to enter unauthorized areas. Fencing and pipeline installed and maintained with this alternative will not close off designated roads and trails or otherwise restrict access to the Forest by recreationists. Step-overs, walk-throughs, or gates will be placed where fencing crosses designated trails. There is only one outfitting and guiding operation currently authorized in this wilderness, and non-wilderness outfitting and guiding operations in the Sunflower Allotment are at less than half the maximum use allowed by the Forest Plan. Thus, Alternative 2 should not affect outfitting and guiding operations or their current impacts to the Forest. In the future, if the Forest authorizes additional outfitting and guiding operations in this area, there may be an increase in visual sightings of cattle during tours. Guides may have to slow down or pause their tours to allow cattle to cross the road or trail, but the presence of cattle should not affect daily operations of additional outfitting and guiding companies. It is unpredictable whether visitors will view this as a photo opportunity or a nuisance. 1 Allotment improvements will follow the Congressional Grazing Guidelines, House Report 101-405, Appendix A Page 7 of 7