Mosquito Bridge Access

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Branscomb

Trad climber
Lander, WY
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 6, 2016 - 07:17am PT
A nice view of Ant Line...a stout 11a finger crack.

Yes, the fear about removing the bridge is that the deconstruction process will damage the climbs underneath it, some of the best there like Twist and Shout and Susan Forever.

Branscomb

Trad climber
Lander, WY
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 8, 2016 - 08:26am PT
Mr. Mustard...10b lieback/OW...burly. FA 80s by Don Garrett and Dan Bolster.
Branscomb

Trad climber
Lander, WY
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 8, 2016 - 11:06am PT
I put this up in supertopo a while back...gives a good idea of how special the Mosquito Bridge is to us Placerville climbers, and those of us who used to be:

I drive downhill around the last hairpin curve, the last steep narrow drop to the American River. The Doug Firs and Black Oaks are thick down here in the shadowed river coolness. The sunlight flashing on the windshield through the bright green canopy of oak leaves, briefly blinding me driving from dimness to dimness, hoping there isn’t some late to work redneck speeding out of Swansboro on my side of the road.

Bought a place out there because they wanted to get away from it all but still have to work in town an hour or more away on this tight windy narrow road. Have to replace the brakes once a year. They drive fast and they’re real cranky because they bought into it but they aren’t rich enough to relax even one day a week. They have to stay at it all the time and they’re all hemmed in in their wide open ten acres of brush and snakes and they flip you off if you get an inch over the center line or you aren’t fast enough or you’re just distracted by the speckling sun on your windshield: they have no time for speckles.

At the last wide spot above the bridge where you have to wait to let cars go across the one lane suspension bridge, I turn around and park facing uphill next to the creek under a California Bay, so sweet and wafting its perfume like a welcome to the shadowed canyon, cool and wet green moss. It will be here long after the silly intense humans are gone.

People stare at me from cars. What are you up to? Start a fire? Steal my stuff? Rape my wife? What’s your trip walking down a country road? I scoot under the bridge abutment and hop boulders across the river to the cliff. Yeah. The Mosquito Coast of late; the Mosquito Bridge to the original participants. Obscure, steep and difficult. We didn’t think we could climb that hard in those days. Now almost everything has been pegged a grade higher. Pretty crazy. Does something good for your spirits to know you were better than you thought.

Now I come mainly to boulder along the base. Hard enough for my meager talents. Touch this water smoothed foundation of my favorite range: the most beautiful, I think, the most forgiving, like a mother who loves her wayward child just because he wanders, but hers only and forwever. The granite is so polished that it looks like glass, a mirror even. I can touch it and see, there on the other side, a young and wild haired me, an old friend always with me inside. I feel him take my hand as I remember that younger me: faster and bolder, maybe better, certainly much crazier: my old friend. Pity those who have never been crazy: they have never lived. Bukowski, I believe.

I almost bought it here free soloing, at the top of Reluctant Elevation, thirty feet or so off the hard stone deck.

Funny little guy panic running around mad as a hatter in there pulling the fire alarms while I’m there on the stage. Like they say, even if the sound cuts out on you, you have to carry on the show because you just fail if you don’t but if you fail carrying on, well, at least you get applause.

You can’t just stand there and cry because this is not the venue for your special little gifts, which it never is. You are always lacking in some way and you just gotta carry on. You just liked being there and now look where all that spiritual and aesthetic bullshit has put you: right up the big creek. So you better just put it in low gear and grind it out, Bobby boy. You don’t want them to find you lying in your own brains and blood down on that granite patio, quietly running down to the sea.

I had to do something before I burned off so when I finally got tired of the nauseating vista of the bulges over on Octopus’ Gardens to my left, it was like something Bukowski said: nature gets to be an endless bore, and more than anything I was getting bored standing there waiting for something to happen so I decided that if I demonstrated an unusual amount of technique and power I could latch what appeared to be a finger lock at the top of the corner and hoping to rely on adrenaline, haul my ass over the top. This worked to remarkable effect and I was able to wimper my way to behind the road support pillar above, where I cowered for a good fifteen minutes trying to calm myslef.

I’m glad I don’t have to wear those shoes anymore.

So here I am, all these years later. Some people would say it was a waste of time. I should have thought more about making money and a career and all that. I’m looking up at the road at, what I assume, are many examples of that thinking, racing back and forth, worried and angry. Yeah, you’re a big success all right, probably Republican to boot.

Ah, that’s neither here nor there, is it, Bobby? Get back to what you know. These movements the memory of long practice, the polished smears to be pressured just so, the smooth jams and bridges. You just let it happen and before you know it you’re on your ass on your pad, sometimes actually planning it that way. More often than not, you have to try it several times before the memory kicks in as to how hard you have to crank to succeed here, how precise your technique must be on this river polished stone. It comes together after a bit and you’re just a passing shadow across the stone.

Maybe that’s all we are, really, shadows passing across this, a small stone third from the sun. Our days are but pretence, our nights the wish of Ophelia, hoping to dream.

The day is dimming. The traffic is lessening, the time between cars longer and longer, allowing the silence to ease up from down stream, the darker green and granite grays, cool between the sound of cars creaking across the old bridge. The gleam of water washing stone in the twilight. Moments of thought impressed on the breathing quiet, as if they were not your own but some air you feel passing through you. You rise and touch stone again. In the twilight the folds and edges stand alive and you move again in the silence flowing around you, moving across stone.

Why we go
Why we are
The magic of where we go
And how we go there…
Branscomb

Trad climber
Lander, WY
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 20, 2016 - 08:57am PT
I have attached this recent email from Teresa Simsiman concerning the progress of the Mosquito Bridge preservation.

Thanks to all of you who filled out the online form to the Eldorado County Supervisors. We at least are on their radar now, it being hard to ignore 309 responses.

I will try and keep everyone posted on this...in the meantime, those of you who haven't done the online form linked at the beginning of this thread, please do so. Thank you all again!


Hi All,


Trying to catch folks before they leave for the Holidays!


First, I wanted to send out my thanks for all the support on the Coalition comment letter for the DEIR, individual comments & also a shout out to all who spread the AW link for stakeholders to send in comments. As of the last check 309 stakeholders sent in comments through this link making it virtually impossible for El Dorado County to ignore our concerns.


That being said - I have contacted Supervisor Ranalli's assistant, Brenda Bailey, per my request she has set up a meeting for stakeholder engagement. So far she has reserved Wednesday January 11th at 3:30 pm. Supervisor Ranalli, Supervisor Veerkamp, County Counsel, County DOT & County Parks and Recreation will be present. It is open to all stakeholders! It is important that we get as many of the interest groups as possible so I would like at least one representative for BLM, climbers, bikers, fishing, boaters, El Dorado Residents and business owners. It is my hope that at this meeting we will have the substantive engagement and mitigation results that we requested in our DEIR comments. PLEASE LET ME KNOW YOUR AVAILABILITY ASAP. Information for location will be forthcoming.


As a follow up to legal representation - AW has received a draft engagement letter from Soluri Merserve specifically to review the DEIR for CEQA deficiencies and to provide legal comment to El Dorado County. While the County has shown it's willingness to engage now, we feel it would be prudent to have this legal administrative record should we have to pursue our interests in court. AW will engage Soluri Merserve before the New Year. We will have them do the review and we will shape the corresponding comments depending on the outcome of the meeting on January 11th.


Finally, I am attaching BLM's comments FYI. Jim modeled the BLM comments from the Coalition comments and also added the full weight of BLM authority over the Public Lands that El Dorado County needs for the Bridge Project. (Thank You Jim!)


If anyone has questions/comments feel free to forward them to me - in the meantime I wish everyone a Merry Christmas, Happy Chanukah and a Happy New Year!


Tree


Theresa L. Simsiman
California Stewardship Director
American Whitewater
916-835-1460




Branscomb

Trad climber
Lander, WY
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 16, 2017 - 08:44am PT
Good news about the Mosquito Bridge:

I wanted to share the good news.

The El Dorado County Board of Supervisors pulled a 180 and unanimously agreed to the following:

1) Keep the "Swinging Bridge" once the new Mosquito Road Bridge is completed.

2) Use SMUD money to provide the estimated now $15000/year maintenance. And refine the cost estimates to better reflect the true cost of maintenance of a pedestrian and bicycle only bridge.

3) Give the DCAO and County Parks and Rec permission to pursue and work with a partner organization on the ongoing care of the bridge.

Obviously details need to be hammered out in the coming weeks but I think we all deserve a pat on the back for the collaborative effort that led to this BOS vote.

If you get a chance email Supervisor Ranalli bosfour@edcgov.us and Veerkamp bosthree@edcgov.us - thank them for the vote to keep Mosquito Road Bridge and that you look forward to working with them going forward.

A big thanks to Bill Center and Nate Rangel for speaking before the Board. And the biggest thanks to Violet Jakab who was in this from the beginning, endured often nasty attacks of character from Swansboro neighbors and gave the most eloquent speech that truly resonated with the Board.

More to come!

Theresa Simsiman
American Whitewater
California Stewardship Director
916-835-1460

Thanks to all who put their two bits in to the El Dorado County Supervisors on this. See, they are reasonable people.

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