Boulder/Maryland Creek/Willow/Ryan Gulch Roadless Areas


 
 

Adoption Status: NOT ADOPTED

Boulder: 1,337 acres (2.1 square miles)
Maryland Creek: 1,539 acres (2.4 square miles)
Willow: 1,164 acres (1.8 square miles)
Ryan Gulch: 632 acres (1.0 square miles)
TOTAL: 4,672 acres (7.3 square miles)

How to get there
These roadless areas are adjacent to the Town of Silverthorne to the southwest, west, and northwest. The primary access road is State Highway (SH) 9, Exit 205 on Interstate 70.

  • There is no public access from SH 9 into the Willow RA.
  • The only public forest access for the Boulder and Maryland Creek RAs is the North Rock Creek Road (FS 1350), which branches off SH 9 at the Blue River Campground, north of Silverthorne. This road leads to a trailhead for the Gore Range Trail (60) at the Eagles Nest Wilderness boundary. You can wander into these roadless areas from there.
  • For Ryan Gulch RA, cross the Blue River on the south side of Silverthorne and take the Ryan Gulch Road (FS 1260) into the Wildernest subdivision. Stay on that road until it ends to access the Buffalo Cabin Trail (31), or take a right down low and turn into the Mesa Cortina subdivision, where you can find the Mesa Cortina Trailhead (32). These trails enter the Eagles Nest Wilderness.
  • The USGS 7 1⁄2’ quads for these RAs are Willow Lakes, Dillon, and Frisco.

Setting
These four roadless areas occupy the lowest portions of the southeast slopes of the Gore Range, where many drainages spill into Blue River. Boulder, Pebble, North and South Rock, Maryland, and Ryan and Salt Gulch are all creeks that flow through these areas. The terrain consists of mellow east-facing slopes, becoming flatter toward the valley floor. The vegetation consists of stands of lodgepole pines and aspens, interspersed with mountain shrublands. Elevations in these areas range from 8,500 feet at Boulder Creek to 10,100 feet in the South Rock Creek area.

What’s special about them?
The area around Silverthorne has grown rapidly, and many subdivisions and developed ranches lie in close proximity to the Eagle Nest Wilderness Area. These small roadless areas provide a much-needed buffer between these developments and the Wilderness boundary. They limit incidences of motorized trespassing from private property, and help to reduce the impacts of urbanization upon the Wilderness.

The riparian corridors along the many creeks in the area provide excellent wildlife habitat. The Rock Creek drainage has a unique diversity of song birds and neo-tropical migratory birds. Salt Gulch in the Ryan Gulch RA is critical winter range for a large herd of elk and a smaller herd of deer. Ryan Gulch is a also a popular recreational access into the Eagles Nest Wilderness.

Potential threats
Burgeoning construction right on the boundaries of these units has an impact that spreads well into these small areas. Light and noise pollution, private traffic, and user-created trails all affect these areas. Calls to "treat" the  forest to address the current mountain pine beetle outbreak may lead to inappropriate levels of timber cutting.

Other info
Residents of subdivisions adjacent to the Ryan Gulch RA desire to thin the dense lodgepole pine forests in the unit within 200 ft of the forest boundary as a firebreak. Their efforts would be best spent in reducing the flammability of their home ignition zone, a 200 ft wide area immediately surrounding and including the homes at risk. In addition to acreage included in the RA by the USFS, conservation groups have identified 1,391 more roadless acres associated with these units, many on the south end of Ryan Gulch along I-70. These RAs are four of twelve roadless areas that are contiguous with the Eagles Nest Wilderness. Together, these form a roadless complex of over 168,000 acres (262 square miles)!



 
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