In the News

Badger Mountain group on $1 million mission

By John Trumbo, Herald staff writer

Friends of Badger of Mountain has less than 60 days to raise $1 million to match a potential state grant for buying another chunk of ridge real estate overlooking the Tri-Cities.

The grassroots campaign has until June's end to raise the money, said Sharon Grant, president of the Friends during a news conference Tuesday at Trailhead Park in Richland.

The land in question is part of 150 acres on Little Badger Mountain owned by Richland developer Milo Bauder.

Grant said Bauder plans to build homes and a small retail center on part of the mountain but may be willing to sell for the right price.

But he won't talk about a price until he knows the Friends group has enough money in hand to be serious, Grant said.

Bauder said Tuesday he didn't want to comment about what the Friends are doing or talking to him about.

Having some of the area's ridges preserved as open space is a worthy goal, said Bill King, Richland's assistant city manager.

"The city's take on these ridges is that they are really important on giving the city its identity. We're happy to work with the community on this," he said.

The Friends would donate the purchased land to the city as dedicated open space.

But raising the money in less than two months is a daunting task, said Grant, who said the group is calling the campaign the Sprint to The Summit.

The group has proved it can raise money to buy land for public access. It gathered $750,000 in 2005 to help buy land on Badger Mountain and then ceded the property to Richland for recreational use.

The group has long-range ambitions to acquire land to develop a ridgetop trail system extending across Red, Candy, Badger and Little Badger mountains.

Grant said Bauder has almost complete control over what she said would be strictly a business deal. He is preparing to build on 41 acres near the top of Little Badger. But that project, which has city approval, is being challenged in an appeal before the Richland City Council.

Depending on the appeal's outcome, selling the property to Friends could be something Bauder might consider, Grant said.

She said she told Bauder the group would go after the $1 million state grant by trying to raise $1 million to match it. She said he wouldn't make any promises until the group had the money.

The group won't be able to raise enough to buy all 150 acres but $2 million could purchase 40 or 50 acres if Bauder agreed, Grant said.

"Land is getting so expensive. We know this is the last year or two we can afford to do this," she said.

Grant said representatives of Friends will hit service clubs hard in coming weeks and hope to rally interest by setting up information tables around the community and asking people to donate.

Members say a survey indicates more than 2,500 people a month use the Badger Mountain trail system.

Ten thousand families giving $100 each would make the $1 million, Grant said.

Bill Lampson, who is on the Friends' advisory council, has pledged $25,000, Grant said. Other business owners could follow the example, too, based on an idea proposed by several Tri-City banks.

Grant said they suggested that they could front $100,000 each for the land purchase, if businesses would agreed to repay pledged amounts to the banks to cover the loans.

"It is a big lift," said Mike Schwenk, a Friends supporter in describing the call for $1 million. But doing it in less than 60 days is an even bigger lift.

"This couldn't be more difficult," said Schwenk, who said protecting the ridges in the Tri-Cities is a quality of life issue that will affect the quality of economic development.

To make donations or learn more about the organization, go to www.friendsofbadger.org.


It’s the season for desert hiking and wildflower appreciation

Tri-City Herald

You felt it and maybe suspected it, but now you can verify it. March was a cold one. As we're reporting, the average temperature for March in the Tri-Cities was 45 degrees, or 2 degrees below normal.

April also is expected to run colder than normal, but don't let that stop you from enjoying some of the best desert hiking of the year. Spring's cool weather provides a pleasant time to get outside before summer heat comes.

We're also starting spring wildflower season, and April brings out our desert flowers at their best.

A hike up the Badger Mountain trail Wednesday morning showed some of the earliest of the balsamroot blooms in the bottom of the ravine as you begin the climb up the trail.

At the top of the first ridge, which I like to call Windy Knob because the wind can blow stronger there than even on top of Badger, a couple of other wildflower varieties are showing off in the very spare and rocky ground where most other plants can't survive. Wish I knew their names, but they're among the most delicate blooms of spring and seem to grow only at this mid-elevation.

Few blooms are showing on top yet, but soon there will be plenty of the hardy desert phlox showing up all over the ridge, along with many others. A ways down the hill, in disturbed ground alongside the ridge road, in a few weeks you will be able to find Piper's Daisy, a delicate variety that grows only in the Columbia Basin.

Watch also for wildlife when you climb Badger.

On Wednesday, the brown dog and I encountered chukar, pheasant and quail. Ravens, which nest on the radio towers at the top, were riding thermal wind currents along the ridge, and the sage was full of sparrows dodging quickly about as a hawk circled overhead. A large flicker, a woodpecker species, popped onto a nearby sage to eye the intruders.

On a recent climb, a horned lark, brilliant in his plumage and brash in his manner, flew onto the trail a few feet away to declare his territory. Other trips have produced glimpses of coyotes and bullsnakes.

I haven't seen rattlesnakes on the ridge, but other hikers have reported them. Some of those may have been bullsnakes, which are harmless but often are mistaken for rattlesnakes, but a few rattlers do live on the ridge. Don't harm any of the snakes; this is their home, not yours, and they would rather get away than cause trouble.

Thanks to efforts of hundreds of volunteers coordinated by Friends of Badger Mountain, more than 3 miles of improved trail now extend across the Badger Mountain park. The land was acquired in 2005 thanks to fundraising efforts led by the Friends group.

Trailheads start at Richland's Trailhead Park, which you can reach by turning off Shockley and going all the way up the hill, or off Dallas Road. The Dallas Road route is not as steep, and a friend with a bad back prefers it, but many people of all ages hit both trails at their own pace. On Wednesday, a couple pushing a baby in a stroller made it to the top -- a good workout for sure.

An estimated 1,000 or more people climb Badger each week, and on weekend days with good weather you'll have lots of company. The view is worth it.

Friends of Badger Mountain and others are working to try to acquire more lands on the ridgetops surrounding the Tri-Cities to save these expansive views for all to enjoy. Information on fundraising efforts and volunteer work party events is available at Trailhead Park.

So quit making excuses about the weather and get out and enjoy what our Mid-Columbia spring has to offer. You won't regret that you did, even if it produces a stiff muscle or two.

Stranded pickup truck removed from Badger Mountain on Feb. 22nd

A stranded pickup truck had been stuck below the Canyon Trail since October, 2008. Two articles about the stuck truck appeared in the Tri-City Herald on October 22nd and 28th.

Here's our story of the removal on February 22nd.

Good news!  On the morning of Sunday, February 22, the white truck was removed from the ravine aside the Canyon Trail. A good sized crew from the Peak Putters, a local 4-wheelers club, volunteered their time and equipment and towed the truck out despite the rain and near freezing temperatures. Adam Fyall, from the Benton County Commissioner's Office, and Jim Langdon, from Friends of Badger Mountain, coordinated the operation with help from fellow friends of Friends of Badger Skip Claeson, John Friley, George Hunt, and Ken McMillan. The truck's owner stayed with the truck and steered. The soil was firm so the vehicle tracks caused minimal damage and the spring growth should help cover them. You can also read about the removal in an article in the February 24th edition of the Tri-City Herald