Conserving energy is especially important for wildlife as temperatures plummet, snow buries food and travel is difficult. Animals like bighorn sheep, bison, deer, elk and moose survive the winter by using the least amount of energy so they can maintain fat reserves, which is especially crucial for females to successfully produce young in the spring.
Stress from winter recreation poses a significant threat to bighorn sheep and can push these iconic animals toward starvation as they endure brutal winters high in the Teton Range. “The park is asking skiers and snowboarders to voluntarily avoid sensitive bighorn sheep winter habitat, give sheep space and help us conserve these animals by spreading the word," said Chip Jenkins, superintendent of Grand Teton National Park.
A georeferenced map of bighorn sheep winter zones is available for download at tetonsheep.org. Areas closed to the public to protect important ungulate winter range include:
* Summits of Mount Hunt, Prospectors Mountain and Static Peak: Dec. 1 through Apr. 30
* Areas around the Snake River, Buffalo Fork River and Kelly Hill: Dec. 15 through Mar. 31
* Northern portion of Blacktail Butte (the open slopes on the southwest side of Blacktail Butte and the Practice Rocks climbing area at the northern tip of the butte remain open): Dec. 15 through Apr. 30
* Wolff Ridge and a portion of the Spread Creek drainage: Dec. 15 through Apr. 30
Visit go.nps.gov/tetonclosures for more information about park closures.
Jeff
HikinginGlacier.com
TetonHikingTrails.com
RockyMountainHikingTrails.com
Ramble On (2nd edition book on the rich history of hiking)
Exploring Glacier National Park
Exploring Grand Teton National Park
Stress from winter recreation poses a significant threat to bighorn sheep and can push these iconic animals toward starvation as they endure brutal winters high in the Teton Range. “The park is asking skiers and snowboarders to voluntarily avoid sensitive bighorn sheep winter habitat, give sheep space and help us conserve these animals by spreading the word," said Chip Jenkins, superintendent of Grand Teton National Park.
A georeferenced map of bighorn sheep winter zones is available for download at tetonsheep.org. Areas closed to the public to protect important ungulate winter range include:
* Summits of Mount Hunt, Prospectors Mountain and Static Peak: Dec. 1 through Apr. 30
* Areas around the Snake River, Buffalo Fork River and Kelly Hill: Dec. 15 through Mar. 31
* Northern portion of Blacktail Butte (the open slopes on the southwest side of Blacktail Butte and the Practice Rocks climbing area at the northern tip of the butte remain open): Dec. 15 through Apr. 30
* Wolff Ridge and a portion of the Spread Creek drainage: Dec. 15 through Apr. 30
Visit go.nps.gov/tetonclosures for more information about park closures.
Jeff
HikinginGlacier.com
TetonHikingTrails.com
RockyMountainHikingTrails.com
Ramble On (2nd edition book on the rich history of hiking)
Exploring Glacier National Park
Exploring Grand Teton National Park
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