posted Feb 12, 2018
This webinar introduce a variety of innovative approaches to resolving trail user conflicts and to review some of these management techniques. We will also look at the obligations land managers and trail users have to help resolve trail conflicts.
posted Jun 1, 2020
The series continues! Join us Wednesdays through June 2020 at 2-3pm ET for focused webinar discussions with panelists on topics specific for outdoor recreation professionals. As the world is in a state of adaptation and change, outdoor recreation experiences and our parks, forests, and public lands are as important as ever. And we are in this together!
posted Jun 12, 2018
The webinar will be centered around groomed winter trails for XC skiers, but will also address the importance of providing opportunities for snowshoeing, fatbiking, winter hiking, and winter trail running.
posted Aug 8, 2019
The health and happiness of people across Massachusetts depend on the accessibility and quality of our green infrastructure – our natural resources, recreational facilities, and great historic landscapes.
posted Aug 10, 2020
The pandemic has presented unprecedented challenges in managing parks and outdoor recreation facilities for visitor use. Please join our esteemed panel for a discussion around maximizing earned income and managing visitor expectations.
posted Feb 19, 2018
by
Tony Boone with Timberline TrailCraft,
Zachi Anderson
This session discusses how, what, where, when, and why to put your trail projects out to bid.
posted Feb 19, 2018
Refuges close to highly-populated areas provide the greatest opportunity to engage new and diverse audiences.
posted Feb 19, 2018
How can you put a charge into that 15-person weekend trail-build and pump it up to 150 or more smiling and eager volunteers?
posted Feb 19, 2018
A MEGA event is a trail build
on steroids.
published Jun 1, 2020
by
Headwaters Economics
The purpose of this report is to describe the economic, quality of life, public health, and other benefits that Mariposa County and its residents are likely to enjoy from the Merced River Trail based on research and experiences of communities with similar projects.