Fred Johnson writes:

"I have climbed 4 of California's Bear Mountains: 

#11    5-22-05    Solo.  Located about 1/4 mile beyond locked gate on upper Stallion Rd off CA 4. Site of CalFire's 'Fowler Bear Mountain' L.O.

#19    8-10-07      Drive-up with CalFire worker to CalFire's 'Shasta Bear Mountain' L.O.  Approached over private property by gated road near #14884 Dry Creek Rd

#20    10-10-06    Solo  from locked gate less than 1 mile from summit, which is site of CalFire's "Siskiyou Bear Mountain" L.O.  Approached from Harris Springs Rd near Hambone via a network of FS and logging roads.

#21    8-7-95    Solo from Doe Flat and Devils Punchbowl via trail and XC. 

Cheers and good luck with this new project in memory of Joe Feller---obviously one of those good guys whose productive life ends much too soon."
 
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View from Bear Mountain #118
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Summit of Bear Mountain #118
PictureBear Mountain #119
Ken Russell (Port Orchard, WA) writes:

"I visited [Bear Mountain #118 (Chelan County, WA)] on October 28, 2012.  It was a nice evening with wide views and just a thin coat of snow on the summit.  To the west rise the high Cascade Mountains and to the east and north, Lake Chelan is framed by high peaks.  The mighty Columbia River can be seen to the southeast.  My only company on the hike was a buck and two does.

"I don’t blame Tony Johnson and Theresa Fisher for turning back from the summit of [Bear Mountain #119 (Clallam County, WA)].   The thick trees and brush (dripping wet when I was there on May 18, 2013) made me feel like I was swimming sometimes instead of hiking.  No views but the summit did have wild rhododendrons that are probably very nice when they bloom."



 
PictureComb Wash 2010, photo by Reid Lustig
Yesterday Joe Feller’s family hosted a wonderful memorial service for him in Berkeley.  Joe’s brother Fred read an inspiring passage by naturalist David Peters about Joe’s work to restore and to preserve Comb Wash.  I thought it was worth reprinting here:

“In March 1988, just after the winter grazing season, Joseph Feller, a professor at Arizona State University in Tempe, took a hike in Arch Canyon.  What Feller saw there, he’ll tell you, was ‘appalling … cow pies everywhere.  The vegetation had all been grazed down to root-stubble.  The stream banks and cryptobiotic crust were trampled and destroyed.  It looked like a war zone.’  Feller headed home determined to do something.

“What he did was appeal BLM’s Comb Wash grazing practices to BLM’s mother agency, the U.S. Department of the Interior.  As a result, DoI administrative law judge John R. Rampton, Jr., directed the area BLM boss to explain and reconsider his Comb Wash grazing strategy….  [T]he BLM manager ignored the court’s mandate and issued another grazing permit, without modifications….

“No quitter, this tenacious feller Joe recruited the National Wildlife Federation and the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance … to join in filing a second, much broader appeal….  The upshot of it all was a rare sweet victory in the ongoing battle for public control of public lands….

“If [Edward Abbey] were here today, I know absolutely that he’d be shouting praises from every canyon rim for Fightin’ Joe Feller and his allies at the National Wildlife Federation.  And rightly so, for these brave few, with help from several unnamed but significant others, have returned this desert Eden to the American public.”

For more, see David Peters, The Nearby Faraway:  A Personal Journal Through the Heart of the West 142-44 (1997).  Joe's co-counsel at the National Wildlife Federation, Tom Lustig, passed away in 2008. Two years after that, Tom's sons Brooks and Reid returned to Comb Wash with Joe and scattered their father's ashes; Reid Lustig's account of that trip is worth reading in full.  Joe's own discussion of the Comb Wash litigation and its legal significance can be found here.

David Sklansky




 
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Puget Sound from Bear Mountain #119
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Detail from Mt. Zion topo
PictureJoe's students
Tony Johnson and Theresa Fisher write with news of their visit to Bear Mountain #119 (Clallam County, WA) on June 6, 2013:

“Attached are Google Earth images, an altitude profile, and photos of the view from near the peak, which was inaccessibly overgrown.  A gang of men from the village with chain saws would have taken a few days to ascend the final 200 feet. Since we couldn't reach the summit we would be most pleased to get a B from the good professor. Our argument for that mark is that the fire roads and trailhead to the mountain are unmarked or indistinct, so finding them required careful reading of the topo and forest services maps by navigator Theresa Fisher.

“Theresa and Tony met Joe through his brother, Fred, who is a fellow alumnus of Tony's at Pomona College.” 


 
PictureView west from Bear Mountain #11
I shared a house with Joe Feller when we were in law school, and we stayed good friends after graduation.  I've never known anyone with a greater zest for life than Joe, or with a more consistently open, curious, and good-humored approach to the world.  I think the first hike I ever took with him was at Cape Cod during the week-long reading period before a set of final exams.  I was reluctant to take a day off from studying, but Joe made the point, obviously correct, that we weren’t going to study the whole week anyway, so we might as well plan a road trip.  Joe had lots of views about road trips, most of which I came to share.  He thought, for example, there were two cardinal rules for a successful road trip:  first, to have a fully worked out itinerary, and second, to be completely willing to abandon the itinerary.  Those have always struck me as good rules for life, not just for road trips.

PictureStallion Way
The picture on the “Welcome” page of this website was taken at the top of Mount Dana on a hike that Joe and I took in 2011.  The day before that we climbed Sonora Peak, the high point of Alpine County, CA; that’s where the picture on the “About Joe Feller” page of this website was taken.  I think it was on the Sonora Peak hike that Joe came up with the idea of the Bear Mountain Project.

Yesterday I drove out to the Stanislaus National Forest to meet a friend and hike up to Corral Ridge, the high point of Calaveras County.  Part of the appeal of that destination was that the trailhead is on State Route 4, which also passes close to the highest prominence peak of Calaveras County, which happens to be named Bear MountainThat made for a nice side trip on my way home.

PictureCape Cod 1983
This Bear Mountain is basically a drive up.  You take a gravel road called Stallion Way south from Route 4, between the mining towns of Angels Camp and Copperopolis.  (Angels Camp is where Mark Twain claimed to have heard the story recounted in “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County.")   The road climbs about 1400 feet over four miles before arriving at a locked gate, and after squeezing through the gate it’s a quarter-mile or so on foot to the summit.  Most of the top is given over to antennas, but there’s also a fire tower, which apparently you could climb as recently as 2005, but which, alas, is is now boarded up and fenced off.  The best views, I thought, were looking to the west, just before getting to the gate.

It was fun day, but I wished Joe could have been along for the trip.

David Sklansky


 
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Dave Owen (Portland, ME) writes:

"I'm a law professor at the University of Maine Law School.  Along with many of my colleagues, I spent part of last week at a biannual natural resources law professors' conference.  Joe had helped organize the conference, and we watched a video tribute, honored him with the first Joe Feller Memorial Run, and heard lots of stories about his accomplishments and antics.  Even for those of us (like me) who barely knew him, it was hard not to feel inspired by his example.

"On the way from the conference to the Phoenix Airport, Todd Aagaard (professor at Villanova Law School) and I had a few hours, which we used to climb Bear Mountain in Sedona.  I believe it's listed as Bear Mountain number 5 on your interactive map.  I've attached a photo of Todd near the top."