Hi,_______________________________________________
The following is from the Santa Fe National Forest's travel management plan, SouthWest area map. Note that the map is for motorized travel, so it doesn't apply to bike travel. The circled area is an inholding at the junction of 376 and 376P. 376P is the FS designation for the "road" the course used from Fenton Lake to 376. You can check with the Forest Service to see if there's a legal easement through the private inholding for non-motorized travel on 376P, but it's not a "public road".
On 9/21/2020 10:08 AM, John Vance via Bike-racers wrote:
OK I'm not understanding this. Where Fenton Lake Road and FS 376 cross, there's no leaving either road. They're public roads. Even if the roads go through his land, they're not his property - they're public property. If this dude is trying to close off access to a forest service road, maybe contact the Forest Service and the County?
On Mon, Sep 21, 2020 at 8:57 AM Rich Capener via Bike-racers <bike-racers@mailman.swcp.com> wrote:
_______________________________________________I have been contacted by a land owner that the Jemez Gravel Grinder crosses his land at Fenton Lake Rd and 376. Apparently several people have been riding this course and when the owner told them they were crossing his land someone said that NMES had access to ride through it. Well, we don't!
I have removed all the info from the NMES website about the Jemez GG. If you have the course saved, please refrain from riding it.
Thanks,
Rich
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