Friday April 26th, 2024 6:14AM

Chattahoochee National Forest: Tree preservation, more controlled burning, more recreational opportunities

By AccessWDUN Staff

Maintaining and restoring pine and oak habitat, more controlled burning, and more recreational opportunities are among the goals listed by the U.S. Forest Service for the Chattahoochee National Forest.

These ideas are included in a recently-completed environmental analysis of the Chattahoochee's Foothills Landscape Project.

The project is designed to maintain and restore healthy forest, habitat and watershed conditions across 157,625-acres within the Chattahoochee National Forest in portions of Dawson, Fannin, Gilmer, Habersham, Lumpkin, Murray, Rabun, and White Counties. Beginning in 2016, partners and community members from across North Georgia have been working together with the Forest Service over several years to realize a shared vision to address the complex conservation challenges across this landscape.

"After years of collaboration with our stakeholders and partners, and environmental analysis by Forest Service experts, I’m proud to share our plan to address complex conservation challenges in the Foothills Landscape," said Gainesville-based Forest Supervisor Betty Jewett. "From the beginning, this project reflected community values to guide our work in the right places for the right reasons. I believe this new approach will bring lasting benefits to the forest and the people we serve for generations to come.”

This landscape includes a diversity of forested and rare habitats, more than 1,100 miles of streams, 188 miles of trails and dozens of recreation destinations.  But unhealthy forest conditions, impairments to waterways, and impacts from human use are threatening the natural resiliency of the landscape and its inhabitants.  The project proposes a variety of management activities to help achieve the desired future conditions for the area, including:    

*Maintaining and restoring pine and oak habitat

*Increased prescribed burning  

*Conserving more areas for threatened hemlocks

*Protecting old-growth forests

*Addressing impacts to streams and waterways

*Creating more wildlife openings and canopy gaps

*Restoring rare habitats such as canebrakes, mountain bogs, and woodlands

*Enhancing sustainable recreation opportunities like trails, campgrounds, and day-use sites

The Foothills landscape project was designed to be different from the very beginning.  Collaborating with a diversity of stakeholders from surrounding communities, the Forest Service strived to create a balanced plan that reflects local values and meets forest objectives.

"Our team and collaborators did tremendous work to put this project together.  Accomplishing landscape-scale restoration is no easy feat, but the significant contributions of the public in the very early stages of the project resulted in a comprehensive and thorough proposal," said Stephanie Israel, who became the new team leader for the project in 2018. Israel added, "Completing this first phase of environmental analysis is a huge milestone.  We are excited to be moving the project forward and will continue to involve and value the contributions of stakeholders for years to come."

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