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HOW ALABAMA
RIDERS HELPED MAKE MINOOKA OHV PARK A REALITY
The inside
story on the creation of this exciting new multi-use ride
area which is set to open in June
For years the locals knew the area as a
trash-infested hangout for hoodlums and ne’er-do-wells that
was best left alone. There was an old lake in the middle of
all the bramble that was pretty much filled up and had
become an impassable swamp. No one really paid too much
attention to this BLM-owned land 30 minutes south of
Birmingham (the oversight of which was ceded to Chilton
County). That is until a group of Alabama OHV enthusiasts
teamed
up with Chilton County Commissioners and proposed a
brilliant idea for this apparently sorry piece of property.
When Glenn Myers and a handful of off-road riders
first formed the Cheaha Trail riders in 1988 to explore ways
to protect and expand riding opportunities in northern
Alabama, they couldn’t possibly have foreseen the nationwide
implications of their efforts. Yet they have become a
shining example of a grassroots riding club that is
responsible for the growing number of OHV riding
opportunities available to enthusiasts across America.
“We saw the future of off-road recreation being
threatened,” said Myers, the club’s president. “National
forests were being closed to motorized recreation, so we set
out to do something about it.”
The Cheaha Trail Riders initially galvanized
their efforts around the creation of a local riding area
that eventually became the centerpiece for an OHV trail
system called the Kentuck ORV (off-road vehicle) Area in the
Talladega National Forest in northeastern Alabama. The
undertaking required thousands of hours of volunteer time
from the club and it also received funding assistance from a
new federal trails funding program, which had just begun in
the early ‘90s which is now known as the Recreational Trails
Program (RTP).
Recognizing that grassroots volunteers such as the
Cheaha Trail Riders would
accomplish
even more success by working together, Honda stepped forward
in 1990 to underwrite the start of a national network of OHV
clubs. In 1991, with dedicated startup and operating funds
from Honda, the National Off-Highway Vehicle Conservation
Council (NOHVCC) was formed.
The efforts of the Cheaha Trail Riders multiplied
immediately. “Without Honda’s assistance in those first
years, our job would have been much harder and taken more
time and effort,” says Myers. “We were some of the first
e-mail users in the country and we swapped success stories
and challenges with other riding clubs. We tapped into
resources and knowledge in a big way.” Eventually, with the
help of the NOHVCC, American Motorcyclist Association (AMA)
and the Blue Ribbon Coalition, Alabama’s various OHV groups
formed under one state organization, The Alabama State
Off-Highway Vehicle Association (ALOHVA), and became even
more politically potent.
“We’ve got more than 300,000 ATVs and dirt bikes
in the state,” said Myers. “When we learned that Chilton
County was interested in developing 159 acres for an OHV
park, with the help of the NOHVCC we made a presentation to
show them that a recreational park was possible for both
motorized and non-motorized users, and that it would be
viable both environmentally and economically.”
With the backing of the Cheaha Trail Riders
, Chilton County wrote a grant proposal for RTP funds and
received $874,000 in 2003, with the county and the club
providing an additional $218,500 in funds, supplies and
volunteer man-hours. Now, three years later the
Minooka
OHV Park project is nearly complete with dozens of multi-use
ATV, single-track and equestrian trails meandering through
lush forest surrounding the revitalized lake. Trails will
also be built for hikers, and disabled-access trails will
surround the lake, which has already been stocked with fish.
A beginning-rider training area is included, along with
camping, electrical hookups and restrooms. One of the more
exciting concepts in the in the park’s future will be an
environmental learning center, modeled after American
Honda’s OHV Environmental Learning Centers in Colton, CA and
Alpharetta, GA.
“We’re utilizing all the resources available in
the OHV community,” said Myers. “We’ve had great support
from the AMA, ATVA, and NOHVCC. Trails Unlimited, a Forest
Service partner, is clearing the trails. TREAD Lightly! is
providing resources to teach responsible trail use and Honda
is lending the expertise in rider training and environmental
stewardship.”
But it is the local volunteers from the Cheaha
Trail Riders and ALHOVA who are carrying the water. They
have worked feverishly over the past several years,
sacrificing their riding time to clear brush and debris,
measure and flag trail, and educate the local community
about the project. “It’s going to be a model OHV park when
all is said and done,” said Myers.
Myers and the other leaders of Alabama’s OHV
community have engaged land managers, politicians, civic
leaders, and succeeded in changing their impressions about
the OHV community. To what does he credit their success?
“We’ve done it by being forthright and broadminded,” he
said. “We want to share public resources with other user
groups. We want to be good stewards of the land. We want to
be good neighbors. And we’re willing to lead the effort
because OHV people are doers. In the end, we are all going
to benefit.”
Minooka OHV Park is slated to open to the public
in June with a grand opening featuring the Governor for the
ribbon cutting. And the best news is that two more big
parcels of land bordering the trails have been purchased by
Minooka OHV Park, giving the park a total of 366 acres to
work with now. For more information on Minooka OHV Park see
the Cheaha Trail Riders website at
www.cheahatrailriders.com
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