Bull Pen reopens as day use area in West Clear Creek2 min read

You can picnic in the Bull Pen, but don’t get caught after dark.

The Bull Pen Ranch, located at the extreme west end of the West Clear Creek wilderness area, was reopened on Saturday, Nov. 2, as a “day use only” facility; it may, however, still be used as an overnight parking area for backpacking excursions into the wilderness.

The “Bull Pen,” as it is generally known, was a popular camping area before its closure in May, but the U.S. Forest Service has determined that it is unsafe for camping due to several “hazard trees” and the fact that the area where most people were camping is located on a floodplain.

“It wasn’t originally designed as a camping area, so people have gone down there and camped in places that haven’t been typical camping areas,” said Deputy Public Affairs Officer Dean Jones of the Forest Service. “There were trees with huge overhanging limbs, and there were a lot of areas that the Forest Service determined would be unsafe for campers to use.”

After its closure, the Forest Service conducted a risk assessment of the area, which included an emergency consultation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service because of the presence of sensitive species — most notably the yellow-billed cuckoo — to determine how to make it safe for use again.

In its assessment, the Red Rock Ranger District decided that it would need to cut the limbs and the tops off some of the trees to make them safer, so they brought in Forest Service certified cutters and an arborist, and also hired a contractor to help do the work.

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But Jones said that district Wildlife Biologist Janie Agyagos had determined during the assessment that the least impact on wildlife would be made if the cutting was put off until October.

“We waited until the fall to protect [the yellow-billed cuckoo] and have a minimal impact to their nesting,” he said. “They’re very active during the summer, so she determined October was the best time to do that.”

Jones said the Forest Service has now made the entire site more formalized.

“Before, you could just park wherever,” he said. “But now they’ve set aside parking spaces to make it ‘you can park here,’ and ‘this is where you can have a picnic.’”

For the full story, please see the Friday, Nov. 8, issue of the Sedona Red Rock News.

Jeff Bear

Jeff Bear began his journalism career in 2003 as a graphic designer and sports reporter at the Weekly Register Call in Central City, Colorado. In 2007 he began working at the Canyon Courier in Evergreen, Colorado, as a graphic designer, but soon transferred into the editorial department where he worked as a copy editor and sport reporter under Editor Doug Bell. After a stint as a graphic designer at American Classifieds in 2009-10, Bear began working in 2011 as a copy editor at the Arizona Daily Sun, in Flagstaff. While at the Daily Sun, Bear was tapped by the late Randy Wilson to report on local sports including Northern Arizona University and Olympic medalists training in Flagstaff for the 2012 Olympics. In 2013 Bear began working at the Red Rock News in Sedona, Arizona, where he was an assistant editor and sports editor. Bear has two daughters, Angela and Jessica, with his wife Nina. He is a singer and guitarist, an avid cyclist and hiker, and enjoys camping with family and friends.

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Jeff Bear began his journalism career in 2003 as a graphic designer and sports reporter at the Weekly Register Call in Central City, Colorado. In 2007 he began working at the Canyon Courier in Evergreen, Colorado, as a graphic designer, but soon transferred into the editorial department where he worked as a copy editor and sport reporter under Editor Doug Bell. After a stint as a graphic designer at American Classifieds in 2009-10, Bear began working in 2011 as a copy editor at the Arizona Daily Sun, in Flagstaff. While at the Daily Sun, Bear was tapped by the late Randy Wilson to report on local sports including Northern Arizona University and Olympic medalists training in Flagstaff for the 2012 Olympics. In 2013 Bear began working at the Red Rock News in Sedona, Arizona, where he was an assistant editor and sports editor. Bear has two daughters, Angela and Jessica, with his wife Nina. He is a singer and guitarist, an avid cyclist and hiker, and enjoys camping with family and friends.