Showing posts with label Clean Up (all). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clean Up (all). Show all posts

Friday, September 1, 2023

2022 - 50th Anniversary Rainbow Gathering in COLORADO - Clean up

Rainbow Family Gathering Clean up Cleanup Report
 In 2022, the Rainbow Family celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Gathering by returning to the state of Colorado, where the Gatherings began. As usual, locals in the area were VERY concerned about crime and damage to the area. A travel blogger who goes by Travel DNA on Youtube said he was going to come up to the site and document the Gathering WHILE it was happening, and then come back after the clean up was complete to see the difference for himself and show video documentation of his findings. 

This first video was recorded at the height was recorded at the height of the Gathering on July 1, 2022. Here you will see footage from inside the forest as the Gathering is going on. 

Then, Travel DNA returns four times after the Gathering to show how well the Rainbow Family cleaned up after themselves.

This second video returns to many of the camps and kitchens at the Gathering and shows you both the DURING and the AFTER pics side by side. 

Keep in mind, the Forest Service never helps the Rainbow Family clean up a Gathering site (as it should be). The attendees work to minimize cleanup, do much of their own, and a dedicated group of volunteers stays in camp, working hard daily to do any restoration work, often turning over compressed soil, and reseeding new paths with local seed. The Forest Service used to print out a report after each Gathering documenting the excellent work done by Gatherers, but stopped supplying these clean up reports in recent years, possibly because Rainbow used them frequently to dispel fears in local communities.

Many thanks to TravelDNA for showing an unbiased local view, and the before and after photos of how it all went down.

Saturday, June 23, 2018

Fox 13 TV News - 2003 UTAH Rainbow Gathering - Wasatch National Forest


Crews clean up in wake of Rainbow Family Gathering
Fox 13 News - Salt Lake City, Utah

Rainbow Gathering Clean Up after the Gathering Rainbow Family Cleanup Do Rainbows trash the forest? Post Rainbow Gathering Rehabilitation Forest Service
"Today the Forest Service showed us how well the Rainbow Family Cleanup Crews did at cleaning up the area"

"There were folks sorting it so it could be recycled and taken to recycling centers. And all the garbage has been removed. There's actually less garbage here than when it started."

"In addition to taking out all they had brought in the Forest Service said the Rainbow Crews did a lot of work to rehab the 1300 acres of land they were camping on.

When I was out here, I saw folks with rakes that were going along, raking the trails, fluffing it back up... I think it's rebounded QUITE WELL as far as vegetation."

"They did what they said they would do.
They cleaned up after themselves.
They left the area in as good of a condition as it could be."


"You cannot tell they were actually even out here, in some areas."

"And the forest service says, after examining the area, they don't see any need for them to come up here and do ANY other work."


Thursday, June 21, 2018

One Year Later - OREGON 2017 Rainbow Gathering

""C" here from John Day, Oregon! 

Took a beautiful little hike today up at Flagtail Meadow, last year’s nationals gathering site! I have to say, the main meadow is looking GORGEOUS! It was spitting snow up there but everything looked untouched. Can’t even tell that a gathering took place up there, no trash and even the parking lot is full of grass! I didn’t expect it to look as good as it did! You all are amazing!
I took many pictures of the whole area!


Thanks so much for coming to Oregon and allowing this local
to spend time with you all! 

After the Rainbow Family Gathering Clean up in Prineville Oregon Rehabilitation Before and After Pics

(click on photo to expand)

We can’t wait for the next one! 
Lovin’ you!"
Rainbow Gathering Rainbow Family Meadow in the forest one year after the Clean up after the Rainbow Family Gathering in Oregon near John Day







Monday, June 18, 2018

Rap 701 - Leaving the Rainbow Gathering

Rap 701

In preparation for leaving...

Pack up all your trash and take it away. Take it far away. Do not impact the small towns near the gathering. Drop recyclables in appropriate collection areas.

Dismantle and disappear your encampment. Pick up your litter. Vanish ALL traces. Douse your fire, ashes cold, scatter your fire rocks. Replace turf.

Cover your local latrine and compost holes solidly with lime and soil. . Latrine tops are burned. 

Remove string and twine from tree limbs. Break up hardened ground with shovels or picks for future root growth and moisture catch. Intermix humus from forest ground if possible.

NATURALIZE! 

When an area is clear and clean scatter logs, branches, leaves. Disappear trails, renew forest habitat. Water systems are removed, cleaned and stored for next year.

Help with disabled vehicles. Fully dismantle ramps and bridges. Water bar steep places to prevent erosion. The final crew re-seeds with appropriate vegetation to complete the process.

Transport as many riders as possible out of the area.

Treat local folks with great kindness.

Drive safely and share this love wherever you go.

Happy Trails!

WE LOVE YOU!!!!



News Story - Clean up - 2017 - OREGON Rainbow Gathering - Malheur National Forest

A fading Rainbow: Hundreds clean up the mess of thousands after gathering
Rainbow Gathering Clean up Report After the Rainbow Family Gathering Cleanup Trash Trashed By Rylan Boggs
for the Blue Mountain Eagle
Published on July 18, 2017

To read this news story, please click here.

Excerpts: 
"He said attendees who stayed after the gathering have been naturalizing the area by removing trails, fire pits and latrines, ensuring all holes are filled in and spreading duff over disturbed areas."

"One of the biggest priorities for those cleaning up is the removal of trash. Everything from cigarette butts to tents..., and volunteers are slowly moving it to the front gate, where it is then trucked to the transfer station outside John Day.
David, a volunteer working near the gate, said roughly 90 percent of the trash has been removed from the forest so far."




photo by Nina Keck/VPR

News Video - 2009 NEW MEXICO Rainbow Gathering - Santa Fe National Forest


News Story from KRQE July 7, 2009.

"Gatherers are already at work at clean up efforts."

"There's so much good work happening here."

"We still have a lot of clean up to do. That's EVERY piece of string in the trees, tied from ropes, every piece of string has to go, every cigarette butt, every thing that you find."





1998 Oregon Rainbow Gathering - Clean up Report

Rainbow Repairs Restore Meadow
A year after 27,000 people camped on Indian Prairie near Prineville, the land shows no signs that they were ever there
Thursday, July 9 1998
By Gordon Gregory, Correspondent, The Oregonian



What is the Rainbow Gathering Who are the Rainbow Family Clean up after the rainbow gathering  Welcome Home Banner over the trail at the Rainbow Family Gathering


PRINEVILLE -- Sitting amid a cluster of blue forget-me-nots and looking over the green lushness of the great meadow, Ochoco District ranger Susan Skalski recalled what the place looked like one year ago.

Instead of the waist-high grasses and the scattered flashes of red Indian paintbrush and yellow lomatium, the expanse was marred by bare dirt paths crisscrossing the soggy meadow.

Tarps had been stretched between trees. Tents of all shapes and colors dotted the 300-acre field. Trench latrines had been dug in the surrounding groves of larch and fir trees. Dust from the ceaseless traffic on the forest road and smoke from the many campfires clouded the mountain air.
Miles of water pipes and banks of mud ovens were scattered over the landscape.
And everywhere was a sea of humanity.

"It was pretty overwhelming," she said.
Indian Prairie, about 30 miles northeast of Prineville, was the site for last year's annual reunion of the Rainbow Family of Living Light. An estimated 27,000 people came and camped, creating headaches for many Crook County residents and worries for forest officials charged with protecting the environment. Skalski and several other U.S. Forest Service employees were back to Indian Prairie this week and they were pleased at what they saw, or rather did not see.

"I'm impressed," Skalski said.
"I never thought this place would recover so quickly."

There was literally no sign that a year ago, this mountain meadow was effectively the second largest Oregon city east of the Cascades.


Although the exceptionally wet spring this year helped loosen the soil, compacted by footsteps, and by giving all the plants a boost, Skalski also gives a lot of credit to the Rainbow Family.

Hundreds of family members stayed weeks after the event decommissioning trails, repairing miles of fencing, removing all the ovens and fire rings, as well as every speck of the tons of trash.
They also removed all the abandoned vehicles and stray dogs left in the area.

"They had a genuine, sincere commitment to leaving the prairie better than they found it," said Terry Holtzapple, part of a team of Forest Service personnel who worked with the family.
Holtzapple, an archaeologist with the Ochoco Ranger District, said Rainbow Family members who stayed at the site weeks after the Fourth of July celebration to clean up and repair the area, knew what they were doing.

"They taught us some techniques for rehabing sites," she said.


Family gathers on Fourth
The Rainbow Family has been gathering every July Fourth weekend on national forest land since 1972. The family is not a classical organization. It is a loose association of people bound by a philosophy of life that embraces personal freedom, environmental respect and communal love. They also reject consumerism and competition for personal gain.
For committed Rainbow members, the annual gathering is a spiritual celebration, as well as an opportunity to experience a type of cooperative living they believe can teach society important lessons.

This summer, they met on the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest in northern Arizona. Most of the estimated 25,000 visitors left after the July Fourth climax, according to Faith Duncan, part of a Forest Service team that handles the annual gathering.

She said about 5,000 people are remaining at the site for the cleanup.
Two people were cited this year because the group refused to get a special use permit the government says is required. The Forest Service thinks that the lack of a permit means that this year's gathering was illegal, although Duncan said no one knows what, if any, repercussions that will have.

Five people cited
Five people were cited last year because the group also failed to get a permit for the Ochoco National Forest. But when one participant signed the permit, the case against the five was dropped.
Duncan said the permit is important because it allows the agency to set health, safety and environmental requirements.

"It's to reassure that all those needs will be met," she said.
The Rainbow Family has repeatedly clashed with the Forest Service over the issue, arguing that the family has a constitutional right to gather on public lands. And family members say they know how to protect the land and to provide participants with essential services and do not need the bureaucratic blessing.

Ochoco Forest officials were impressed by the rather obscure yet sophisticated infrastructure of the Rainbow Family. And while they think authorities need to be fully involved from the onset, they say the family is able to take care of itself.

Bruce Cheney, Ochoco District fire management officer who also helped oversee last year's event, said it became apparent that the old-timers among the Rainbows had tremendous influence over the group.

"If you look under the surface, they're very organized," he said.

Cheney said the group was able to provide its own security, food service and medical aid, as well as its own social services. People who needed special care or attention were taken care of, he said.

"It was kind of impressive to me," he said.

Cheney also said that the gathering showed him and others on the Ochoco just how special Indian Prairie is. The gentle beauty, combined with the size and resilience of the place, was made more apparent by watching thousands of strangers come to visit.
"It made us appreciate what this thing is," he said of the meadow.
Cheney expects the Ochoco will begin to manage the area more for its beauty and recreational appeal than it has in the past. Citing a clear-cut on the edge of the meadow, Cheney said, "We probably won't do that again."
"It's something we've taken kind of for granted."


From The Oregonian and the Associated Press


Original Source

Clean Up Report - MISSOURI - 1996 Rainbow Gathering in Mark Twain National Forest

United States     Forest       Mark Twain National Forest
Department of     Service      Doniphann - Eleven Point Ranger District
Agriculture                    1104 Walnut St. RR 1, Box 1908 P.O. Box 68
                               Doniphan, MO 63935 Winona, MO 65588 Van Buren 63965
                               573-996-2153 573-325-4233 573-323-4216
                               (All numbers listed are Voice/fax-Accessible)

After the rainbow gathering forest service pleased with clean up efforts by Rainbow Family
Caring for the Land and Serving People




______________________________________________

Date. July 29, 1996

To: Rainbow 1996 Gathering Participants


On this date Ben Wyatt and myself conducted a final inspection of the Spring Crook area where the Rainbow's 1996 gathering took place.. We discussed the final cleanup measures with Badger, Riffraff, and Dakota.

We found the entire area completely cleaned up and rehabilitated. All trash had been picked up and removed and all latrines and compost pits had been filled In and rehabilitated as described in the rehabilitation plan. All construction materials used in housing and cooking facilities had been scattered throughout the area to resemble a more natural condition.

With the recent rains the trampled down vegetation in the fields had already started to green-up and revegetate the heavily used areas. There were several areas that had been seeded with wheat and some clover and this seeding work was beyond the rehabilitation plan specifications.

The cleanup results were excellent but of no surprise. From the very first contacts - made at the beginning of the gathering clean-up work was being conducted by sorting trash, rehabilitating latrenes and compost areas, and continuous picking up trash including cigarett butts.

It is very obvious to me that there are several members of the Rainbow Family dedicated to maintaining a clean environment despite the obstacles of the heat/humidity, getting sick, and an overwhelming job. Individuals I would like to personally thank include: Badger, Dakota, Saylor, Jim, Victor, Val,, Kaba, Riffraff, and many others who worked so hard.

My personal thanks for a job well done and appreciated by all users of this National Forest area.

(signed) Terry Miller
TERRY MILLER
District Ranger



Original Source

Clean Up Report - OREGON - 1997 Rainbow Gathering in Ochoco National Forest

Do Rainbows trash the forest? How well do the Rainbow Family clean up? Who cleans up after the Rainbow Gathering.
United States Forest Big Summit Ranger District Department of Service 33700 Ochoco Ranger Station
Agriculture Prineville, OR 97754





_____________________________________________
File Code: 2720
Date: July 28, 1997

Rainbow Family of Living Light

Dear Rainbow Family Participants,


We are pleased with the cleanup and rehabilitation efforts by the Rainbow Family volunteers following the 1997 Gathering on the Big Summit Ranger District. Your commitment to caring for the land was demonstrated by your thoroughness and attention to detail and the District appreciates your hard work and cooperation in meeting the resource objectives.


When the number of Rainbow Gathering participants rapidly decreased from some 15,000 to about 500 between July 8 and July 15, kitchens and camps were dismantled and activity areas were cleaned up very quickly. Garbage was centralized; recycling and trash removal efforts were initiated and continued until completed.

Evidence of trails disappeared, water bars were constructed where necessary, and slash was scattered. Rocks were effectively dispersed from fire rings, circles, and ovens. Latrines, grey water, and compost areas were backfilled, kitchen structures were dismantled and little to no evidence remains of their locations. Compacted areas, particularly around the kitchens, were spaded and slashed and the heavy traffic areas around Welcome Home and drum circles were reseeded. In many areas, vegetation was recovering within two weeks following peak of the gathering. Fences were spliced and repaired. Abandoned vehicles were identified and towing was coordinated with the Forest Service and the Rainbow Family participants.

Cleanup efforts and rehabilitation were thorough and occurred mostly within two weeks following the peak of the gathering. Our post-gathering walk-though inspections showed that the cleanup volunteers were highly committed to completing the job.

Those of us on the Big Summit Ranger District appreciated your excellent cooperation on the resource issues before, during and after your gathering. Thanks again for your commitment to cleanup and restoration of Indian Prairie.

Sincerely,
(signed) Susan V. Skalski
SUSAN V. SKALSKI
District Ranger


Caring for the Land and Serving People


Original Source

Clean Up Report - PENNSYLVANIA 1999 Rainbow Gathering in Allegheny National Forest





FINAL IMPACT SUMMARY

1999
NATIONAL RAINBOW FAMILY GATHERING
ALLEGHENY NATIONAL FOREST
***********
1999 National Rainbow Event Resource Summary
USDA, Forest Service, Region 9

Allegheny National Forest

Introduction: The 1999 National Rainbow gathering occurred on lands administered by the Allegheny National Forest, Marienville Ranger District. The event occurred from early June, 1999 through September 1999 when clean-up operations were completed.
The site chosen for the gathering was just south of the Bear Creek Campground near the community of Ridgway, Pennsylvania. This site was very remote with limited interior vehicular access opportunities. The vegetation is almost entirely tree-covered with limited interior openings. Because of the extreme remoteness, steep terrain, and limited openings, this site was not recommended as desirable for a gathering of this magnitude.
A team of Forest Service Resource Specialists was assembled, charged with the task of doing a pre/post event assessment of resource impacts both negative and positive. These assessments were shared openly and frequently with Rainbow Family members in the hope that long term negative impacts of the gathering would be minimized or avoided. Specialists in Soils, Heritage, Water Quality, Recreation, Engineering, and Wildlife made an initial and post-event assessment of the resources. The resource writeups are included in this document and form the basis for the following summary.
Summary: After reviewing the pre/post event evaluations by the team of resource specialists assigned to this event. I have concluded that there will be minimal long-term negative resource impacts to the Bear Creek site. One Heritage site was damaged during the event. All other resource impacts have been adequately addressed, mitigated or rehabilitated.
The post-event Rainbow Family contingent did a very good job of cleanup and site reclamation. As time passes, it will be increasingly difficult to determine that a gathering of this magnitude ever occurred in the Bear Creek area. The Forest Service District Ranger and Resource Assessment team experienced a high degree of cooperation with the family on any matter where natural resource issues were of concern. I believe this is largely due to the cooperative spirit that was established with family members at the outset of the gathering and carried that the event by mutual encounters by Forest Service and Rainbow family members.

LEON F. BLASHOCK
District Ranger




CLEAN UP and SITE RESTORATION
These activities consisted of searching out and filling in all slit latrines; removal of all litter and man made facilities from the Bear Creek Valley and along Forest Service roads numbered 135, 136, 393 (bus village), and 161, and Bear Creek Recreation Area; removal of abandoned vehicles; restoration of wildlife food plots; restoration of areas that needed waterbars and seeding.

The energy and commitment that went into returning the site back to its near natural state is to be highly commended. All requests for needed restoration action and follow-up was met with a spirit of wanting to do the right thing for clean-up and restoration. The USFS resource coordinator met many times with various groups and individuals of the Rainbow Family (RBF) prior to, during, and after the gathering to coordinate and seek cooperation in reducing resource impacts and mitigate impacts from RBF activities.
The Resource Coordinator (RC) made numerous trips into Bear Creek Valley during the clean-up/restoration phase and when only 12 campers were left. Lists were made of what had to be done and given to members. Several walk throughs were made with RBF members to see what needed to be done and to what standard.
The RC spent several days walking out most of the trail system located on the plateau, low slope, and riparian positions. No uncovered latrines were found. One was found that did not have enough soil cover but was covered correctly the next day.
Litter and trash removal started on July 6th. The material was removed to three concentrated recycling centers. All material was examined and separated for recycling. Local organizations were contacted for the various materials and they came out and picked up the material. Remaining non-recyclable material was placed in large dumpsters to be hauled to a local landfill. Some material was taken home by members to ease the demand on local landfills. RBF fully met their obligation to remove all litter/trash material. All abandoned vehicles were removed.
One wildlife food plot required restoration. This plot was at the A Camp location. RBF contracted with the same contractor the Allegheny National Forest (ANF) uses to renovate food plots. The work met ANF standards and was completed in a timely manner. One other plot was impacted but it needed renovation prior to RBF use.
Approximately 60% of the main trails were located on existing Forest Service roads, historical logging trails and/or historical logging railroad grades. The main trail in the "Main Meadow" area was wide, bare of vegetation and compacted. Rainbow Family rented an aerator and ran this over most of the trails. It removed a core of soil about 3/4 inches wide and 1 to 2 inches deep. On these compacted areas, the seed catch and sprouting was greatest in these small holes. After being undisturbed for 3 to 4 weeks natural vegetation began to sprout. Some areas were too shady to plant, but the RBF took it upon themselves to seed some of these areas. Some existing waterbars were restored. One area of waterbars was not done correctly. Members re-did those water-bars. Kitchen Areas were aerated using shovels and picks. Bridging and stone crossings were removed to allow for natural drainage. Some observable traces of the sites occupation will remain until leaf fall. The RBF satisfactorily "naturalized" camping areas and kitchen sites by scattering rocks, scattering logs, and filling fire pits.
Bill Moriarity
Resource Coordinator


Original Source