MT. ASHLAND SKI AREA: STRUGGLING TO SURVIVE, FAILING TO EXPAND
A view into the proposed Mt. Ashland Ski expansion area in the winter of 2011. The lack of a deep snow pack this season has brought the ski resort to the brink of financial collapse, ensuring they won’t have the funds to expand anytime soon.
For many years
now the Mt. Ashland Association (MAA), owners of the Mt. Ashland Ski Area, have proposed expanding their operation by building new ski runs and
chair lifts in the McDonald Peak Roadless Area and the municipal watershed for
the town of Ashland, Oregon. The expansion would include over 70 acres of new
ski runs, clear-cut into old-growth forest at the headwaters of Ashland Creek. The
area in question includes numerous rare plant species, including Henderson’s horkelia (Horkelia hendersonii), the Siskiyou Mountains’ only stand of Engelman spruce (Picea engelmannii), and the world’s
only population of the Mt. Ashland lupine (Lupinus lepidus var....
ANNOUNCING THE SECOND PRINTING OF THE SISKIYOU CREST: HIKES, HISTORY & ECOLOGY
I am pleased to announce that the first printing of The Siskiyou Crest: Hikes, History & Ecology sold out and that the second printing has been completed and is now available for sale.
Luke Ruediger, January 31, 2014
Books are available through this blog and at the following retail stores:
Medford, ORThe Northwest Outdoor Store
Ashland, ORBloomsbury BooksThe Northwest Nature ShopThe Ashland Outdoor Store
Grants Pass, OROregon Books & GamesAquarius Books & Gifts
Cave Junction, ORCommuneITea
Eugene, ORTsunami BooksBackcountry Gear, Inc.
Crescent City, CAJefferson State Books
The Black Salamander — Aneides flavipunctatus
Photo by Luke Ruediger
The Black Salamander is relatively rare in the Siskiyou Mountains. Unlike the restrictive range of the Siskiyou Mountains Salamander (Plethodon stormi), which is centered mainly around the mountains of the Applegate Valley, the Black Salamander (Aneides flavipuntatus) has a range that extends from Sonoma County, CA in the south, up to Jackson and Josephine Counties, OR at the northern end of its range. There is also a disjunct subspecies (Aneides flavipunctatus niger) in the Santa Cruz area. Experts are currently debating a further separation of the species into four subspecies, with the northwest lineage—including the Siskiyou Mountain population—given its own subspecies. Currently there are only 17 documented sites in Oregon, 14 of which are found on federal lands, including the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest and the Medford District BLM. 93% (or 13) of the known sites are found within the Applegate River watershed.
The Black Salamander...
Winter Photos of the Siskiyou Crest
Many creeks froze over in the recent cold snap
Little Greyback Roadless Area
View of the Red Buttes Wilderness
“The Octopus Tree,” a large canyon live oak in the Applegate foothills
Icicles on moss in the Upper Applegate





