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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

In brief: Birders help science in Great Backyard Bird Count

Birds are mobile creatures and get what they need from a number of sources. Only in extreme weather do feeders become an important food source. (The Spokesman-Review)
From Staff Reports And News Services

Birders – including a lot of families and kids – are signing up to contribute 15 minutes of their favorite hobby to science.

The Great Backyard Bird Count, Feb. 13-16, involves birders of all levels of experience to count the number of birds they see in a 15-minute period and enter their tally, by species, online.

Participants can conduct their count in their own backyards, in a neighborhood park or anywhere they choose.

Check it out at gbbc.birdcount.org.

Nine snowmobilers cited

Seven snowmobilers recently were cited for riding in the Mission Mountain Wilderness and two others were cited for entering another protected area in national forests of Montana.

The snowmobilers that entered the designated wilderness, where motorized vehicles are prohibited, were each fined $325. 

Flathead National Forest officers said they observed snowmobile tracks entering the wilderness area while patrolling the Mission Mountain Wilderness boundary. Four of the snowmobilers were from Kalispell and the other three were from the Polson area.

Forest Service enforcement also cited two snowmobile operators who violated the Badger-Two Medicine closure area on the Lewis and Clark National Forest.

One man from Raymond, Alberta, stated he knew the area had been closed in the past but that someone told him it was no longer closed to snowmobiles. He was cited for operating a snowmobile in violation of the Motor Vehicle Use Map.

A man from Cut Bank drove his snowmobile past two blaze orange boundary signs advising that the area was closed to motor vehicles, officers said in their report.

Both citations included a $175 fine.

“Snowmobilers have a responsibility to know where they can and cannot operate on Forest Service land,” said Teresa Wenum, conservation education coordinator with the Flathead National Forest.

The Forest Service provides free maps showing areas that are open to motorized travel and recreation.