Just want to make everyone aware that Dave Mauro of Timberworks donated his heavy equipment operator time to grade, gravel, and finish the trailhead parking lots at Ten Gallon, McBride Springs, and the Nordic Center, thus saving MSTA a load of money. He also leveled out the big piles of gravel at Nordic, thus significantly increasing the size of the lot there. This will make it easier to clear snow and park for the ski season, and also creates a huge lot for summer parking to use the Learning Zone bike paths.
Thank you, Dave (and Timberworks) for jumping in big time to help build Gateway II, which has become a community effort!
Thank you, to our Mount Shasta Trail Association community, and all those that included us in your Giving Tuesday plans. We are eternally grateful for your generous show of support.
The results are in and you were incredibly generous — we met our $30,000 goal! We saw 144 donors participate in Giving Tuesday. We will invest these funds in on-the-ground multi-use trail projects. Thank you again and may you have a wonderful holiday season!
Kudos to our steadfast trail crew for braving the cold and snow to install signs on EMH! The morning started out crisp and clear but slowly became stormy. A determined group stood in the road for several hours to divert traffic while the rest of us focused on driving posts and attaching signs.
Many thanks to Chris Marrone, who purchased and retrieved a post driver, fabricated an extension (many hours of work), and spent the whole day loading and unloading equipment and driving steel posts, all to save MSTA money. And thanks to Emma Wilcox, Barbara Paulson, Steve Eddy, Neil Posson, Mark Derby, Steve Larson, Mark Telegin, Jim Wrona, Tony Mills, John Thomson, Rick Cory, and Mike Hupp for dividing up the work.
You can see what happens when you try to drive steel signposts into rocks!
I have a dozen volunteers for tomorrow morning, so we might have it covered. But if you just want to see what we’re doing, and maybe heckle the workers, we’ll be starting the post and sign installation between 9 and 9:30 am about ¼ mile below the McBride Trailhead on Everitt Mem Hwy (you’ll easily see the chaos). And, we can always use extra help.
Even though the weather looks a little iffy, our volunteer contractor apparently has the equipment we need and is ready to work.
We’re going to try driving in the posts, not digging them, so we don’t need quite so many people. What we do need is the traffic control crew of about 6 or7 (at least for the morning work on Everitt Mem Hwy), a small crew to handle the signs themselves, and a small crew to handle the posts. If we dig any holes with an augur, then perhaps we’ll need someone with a pickup to go get some gravel.
Let me know if you can help and I’ll divide up the work. Final announcement will go out tomorrow evening with times and locations. Thank you.
It has been an extraordinary year for the Trail Association as we expand the Gateway Trail system. We still need your help to get all 46 miles of new trail and 5 trailheads across the finish line!
Please consider donating to MSTA on Giving Tuesday this November 28th. As an all-volunteer organization, 98% of donations are invested in on-the-ground projects.
The Community Foundation of the North State will be awarding different non-profits monetary prizes throughout the day on Tuesday, so donations made between 6:00 AM and 8:00 PM increase MSTA’s chances of getting an additional $1,000 or more!
Black Bear Diner is teaming up with North State Giving Tuesday to award prizes to nonprofits. We won $5000 two years ago this way (although I’m not sure of the amount this time).
Go to North State Giving Tuesday and scroll down to “Shout Outs & A’Paws Contest,” and select “This Voting Link.” Then scroll down to Mount Shasta Trail Association (Sisk County nonprofits are listed second and MSTA is about ¾ of the way to the bottom of the list). Select MSTA as your favorite nonprofit. That’s all you have to do.
Giving Tuesday – the Trail Association’s only fund raising effort – is Tuesday November 28th. However, to beat the rush you can make your donation any time from now up through the 28th.
For more information on all the great work MSTA is doing and to make a donation, click here.
Lynda is taking a new trail and retiring from the MSTA board. She has been an active member of our board for several years. As our creative director, Lynda was the mastermind of our “community based” Trail Challenge. Her vision was to inspire trail users to challenge themselves and others to participate in healthy outdoor activities by hiking and biking the trails that surrounds us.
Giving Tuesday was a passion for “Team Captain” Lynda. She developed a variety of promotional materials to get the word out to donate to MSTA. Over the last 5 years many supporters have viewed members of the board participating in humorous Giving Tuesday videos. Those videos were Lynda’s inspiration.
At the urging of Lynda, MSTA now has a beautiful logo that represents both hikers and bikers. This eye-catching logo has had countless compliments from many of our supporters.
Although, the board won’t be seeing Lynda at our meetings, we will see her having fun on the trails biking, hiking and skiing. We send her good wishes on her new adventures.
The Mount Shasta Trail Association is pleased to announce that Rick Cory has joined its Board of Directors.
Rick grew up in Burlingame in the San Francisco Bay Area and graduated from San Jose State in 1989 with a degree in Fire Protection Engineering. He was backpacking across Europe when the Loma Prieta earthquake occurred and brought him home.
He worked for 30 years for the Fremont Fire Department, retiring in 2021 as a Division Chief. He worked extensively on wildland mutual aid as a Strike Team Leader and Safety Officer and responded several times to the Mount Shasta area. Rick is very proud of his work with FEMA Urban Search and Rescue Task Force 4 and especially their 3-week response to Hurricane Katrina with nearly 1000 rescues.
His first introduction to this incredible area was in 1998 when (girlfriend at the time) Luce and Rick took one of their first trips together visiting Mossbrae Falls. In 2010 they purchased a home across the street from his cousin in Dunsmuir. They taught all of their 4 children to ski at the Mt Shasta Ski Park and how to fish in the Sacramento River. One of his very favorite things to do is a long bike ride ending at the Dunsmuir brewpub.
Rick has watched with anticipation since 2015 as the new Gateway II trail network developed and has loved every minute working with the volunteer crews building trail. Rick is also proud to have completed every Mount Shasta Trail Challenge since its inception in 2018 and is excited to now help continue this great program.
Luce and Rick look forward to many years mountain biking, snow shoeing, skiing, and hiking with their dogs in this beautiful area.