Crested Butte Recreation Plan

How is the Center involved?

The Town of Crested Butte is renowned as a year-round outdoor recreation mecca. Nearly every direction you look there are endless opportunities to hike, bike, dirt bike, ski, ride horses, snowmobile, hunt, and fish just out the front door. Most of these outdoor recreation pursuits occur on public lands. This can be an economic boost but can have unintended consequences to the land.

Western Colorado University's Center for Public Lands supports the community of Crested Butte’s efforts to responsibly meet the recreation needs of current and future residents of the region, as well as its visitors. The Center supports this work through visitor use data collection, public input, on-the-ground studies, and open dialogue with local leaders and key stakeholders.

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and Crested Butte Land Trust (CB Land Trust) had observed a noticeable increase of recreational visitation in the Slate River Valley, northwest of Crested Butte, Colorado. However, these agencies lacked scientifically grounded baseline numbers to help support this assertion.  

Master in Environmental Management graduate Brian Lieberman supported the BLM’s need for baseline visitation figures with his Master’s project. Through observational data in summer 2015, infrared technology and surveys, this study developed those numbers for the BLM and the CB Land Trust. Accurate visitation statistics on busy areas of publicly accessible lands provide land managers a tool to help balance the social and environmental values of the land, a solid backing to support further management efforts and a strong position for requesting funding to develop recreation infrastructure. 

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Marble Lead King Loop

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Bears Ears Field School