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What will the Blackberry, Soda Creek timber harvest mean for Dunsmuir?

Shareen Strauss Mt. Shasta Area Newspapers After many questions and complaints from concerned  residents in Dunsmuir about the Blackberry Timber Harvest Plan on the Blackberry and Soda Creek ridges over Dunsmuir, city councilor Dave Keisler hosted a public information meeting last Friday with the companies involved in the project.  Around 40 residents, most whom live on South First Street or that have property that borders the timberland where the cutting will take place, came to the Dunsmuir Community Building for answers and information. District 2 Siskiyou County Supervisor Ed Valenzuela and Lynda Scheben with the Disaster Planning and Action Committee were also in attendance.

Podcast: 15 hikes near Salem offer forest, wildflowers, waterfalls

Podcast: 15 hikes near Salem offer forest, wildflowers, waterfalls
statesmanjournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from statesmanjournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Wilderness permit system for Three Sisters, Mt. Jefferson start in 2021

A long-planned permit system that will limit the number of people allowed to hike and camp in three of Oregon s most popular wilderness areas will go into effect for the spring and summer of 2021, the U.S. Forest Service announced Thursday.  The permit system was set to begin in 2020 but was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic.  The system will require all campers and some day-hikers to get a special permit before entering the Three Sisters, Mount Jefferson and Mount Washington wilderness areas between May 28 and Sept. 24. Coming on the heels of a years-long process, the new system is aimed at reducing crowds and impact across 450,000 acres of Oregon s most iconic backcountry between the Willamette Valley and Central Oregon. 

Almost 100 years ago the last sternwheeler went down the Fraser River in the Cariboo.

Almost 100 years ago the last sternwheeler went down the Fraser River in the Cariboo.
mycariboonow.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mycariboonow.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Almost 100 years ago the last sternwheeler went down the Fraser River in the Cariboo

Almost 100 years ago the last sternwheeler went down the Fraser River in the Cariboo SHARE ON: S.S. Quesnel on the rocks (Photo supplied by Quesnel Museum) A Quesnel Museum and Heritage Manager told Vista Radio the final sternwheeler that ran aground and eventually sank in the Fort George Canyon during May of 1921. Elizabeth Hunter said it was originally called the City of Quesnel. (Photo supplied by Quesnel Museum) “It was built by John Strand, who built the Cariboo Hotel on Front Street and our first hospital and lots of other things in town.   It sounded like it didn’t do well on its first voyages, so in the same year, it was lengthened.   The quote is used that it was lengthened and its name was shortened, so it became ‘the Quesnel.’ From 1919 to 1921 it mostly ran between Quesnel and Fort George.”

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