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Volunteers pitch in to improve Cortez’s Geer trail network

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Monday, May 7, 2018 4:34 PM
Keith Evans explains the Mildred Road access point for the Geer Natural Area. He had been allowing people to ride trails on his land and recently sold the parcel to the city of Cortez to expand the natural area.
Twenty volunteers chopped out a new trail route at Geer Natural Area to avoid private property during an event Saturday.
Volunteers trail builders worked in tandem and finished the project in just a few hours, then were treated to a barbecue lunch.

About 20 volunteers armed with picks, scrapers and shovels rerouted trail sections at the Geer Natural Area in Cortez on Saturday, then enjoyed a barbecue lunch.

The event was sponsored by the city of Cortez, Southwest Colorado Cycling Association and the Montezuma Land Conservancy.

A quarter-mile section of the Mildred Road access trail was moved off private property and onto city property. Another section on the western edge of the park was rerouted away from an eroding stream bank.

The Geer Natural Area contains 9 miles of hiking and biking trails centrally located in Cortez.

The city of Cortez recently purchased 50 acres of the trail system from landowner Keith Evans for $50,000. Evans had built trails on the parcel that connected with city trails, and he had been leasing the property to the city for public access.

Before the sale, Evans had also put the land in an easement with the Montezuma Land Conservancy, ensuring it will stay open space.

The city’s purchase includes the Mildred Road access point, which Evans had opened to the public last year.

“We’re seeing good use on the new access,” Evans said.

Plans for the Geer Park area are to reduce social trails and improve signage to prevent confusion for trail users. The trails cause confusion, are not sustainable and are considered redundant.

Also, a half-mile flat and straight walking path is being planned along a perimeter section of Geer. It will be built wide enough so two people can walk side by side.

Creating open space and a trail system within a growing city is a long-term investment in the future, says Travis Custer, executive director of the Montezuma Land Conservancy.

“To have natural areas in close proximity to neighborhoods is really valuable, and gives people good opportunity to enjoy the outdoors,” he said.

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