Covid and dogs and bikes.
Because of mitigating  from Covid, people needed company and something to do 
out of the house, so they bought dogs and bikes. Therefore  more people, bikes, 
and dogs on trails.IMHO an increase in education  for "newcomers " to the 
trails is needed. Some people  including  myself are unaware of what is best 
way to use trails while on them.Lynne  L
Sent from the all new AOL app for Android 
 
  On Wed, Jul 6, 2022 at 9:10 AM, Barbara Peskin<bpeski...@gmail.com> wrote:   
Hi Lincoln, There was a string of discussion that didn't have a subject line 
about trail use - I  appreciate many comments there including the one I am 
pasting below my own comments here.
As a daily dog walker on a variety of Lincoln Trails at Mt. Misery, Harrington 
(aka Stonybrook) and near Sandy Pond, it is my hope that the Conservation 
Commission and the Lincoln Land Conservation Trust, each which manage different 
parcels of open space in Lincoln, would consider leaving trail use as is for 
now - no changes. 
There is another meeting and potential vote on July 13 by the Conservation 
Commission. I am not sure of the timeline for LLCT.  My hope is that neither 
group makes trail use changes at this time. I believe, the Conservation 
Commission proposal to open many more trails to biking, including half the 
trails at Mt. Misery, would bring in large bike groups that would negatively 
impact  walkers from Lincoln, Concord, Maynard, Sudbury, Wayland and beyond 
that walk our trails, and be detrimental to wildlife and habitat. It is not 
about being exclusive. It is about being inclusive.  Everyone, including 
mountain bikers, can walk with their kids, dogs and on horse back on these 
trails. The wildlife and habitat we have in Lincoln now and over the last 
decades are accustomed to our current trail use.  In some cases, people donated 
land or donated money to buy conservation land based on the off-leash dog 
trail/no bike current maps. Truth be told I see single mountain bikers on some 
of these "no bike" trails now, but because they are officially no bike trails, 
bike groups don't come. The proposed changes would not only open half the 
trails at Mt. Misery to bikes, it provides a process for large bike groups to 
get permits to use them.
Asking for no changes, is not about being exclusive, it is about being 
inclusive and nature-minded in a Lincoln way. The wildlife that calls Lincoln 
home, along with in-town and out-of-town walkers using the trails today, 
appreciate that Lincoln is inclusive and has a history of protecting nature.
I appreciate very much the mountain bikers who have posted on Lincoln talk 
their love of nature, too. The current trail use map gives some mountain biking 
opportunity while at the same time does not encourage large bike groups in our 
parking spots and on our trails.
This is one of the comments in the other string that touched on this:
"LIncoln is a very progressive town, and despite the nickname "the white-hairs" 
involved in Lincoln town governance with their long experience and memories of 
Lincoln and society they kept Lincoln on a good path.  I have seen this over my 
lifetime of 70 years, starting as young boy taken to town meetings by my 
father.  A lot of discussion and views, but the resultant path has been a good 
one.  Without them and younger ones too there would not be the conservation 
land and accessible Nature we have in Lincoln: We would have lost the Nature we 
have to develop and over usage. Wisdom existed, no change just for change's 
sake.  I see that there need be no rush to change trail usage, there is still 
much to consider. For example,  my recent observation in the area around Mt. 
Misery: the signage is really confusing to users.   
My bottom line: I think we are at a point where no more detrimental impact 
placed on Nature is worth considering."-- 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Barbara Peskin

My Moments in Nature Photo Gallery: barbarapeskin.com
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