Rainbow Gathering Update
Forest Service
Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests
1755 Cleveland Hwy
Gainesville, GA 30501

Web: www.fs.usda.gov/CONF
Social Media: @ChattOconeeNF
Public Information: (470) 208-2839
Location: Bull Mountain, off FSR 28-1 and FSR 77

Lumpkin County Sheriff:
Dial 911 for emergencies
Office: (706) 864-0414
6/19/2018 7:00 PM

Announcements

• Chestatee Regional Hospital in Dahlonega, Ga. will be permanently closing on June 30, 2018.
• Forest Service employees continue to remind visitors that facilities at Forest Service campgrounds and recreation areas are for paying, registered users only.
• The Jake and Bull Mountain Trail System remains open to public use. Trail users should be aware of increased pedestrian use and exercise proper trail etiquette in sharing these multiple use trails.
• During the temporary closure of FSR77, Springer Mountain trailhead can be accessed using the Appalachian Trail approach trail beginning at Amicalola Falls State Park, or by Doublehead Gap Road onto FSR42.

Background

The Rainbow Family of Living Light has chosen a site on the Chattahoochee National Forest for its 2018 national gathering. The event will coincide with the Fourth of July holiday, and participants have already begun arriving. The forest will oexperience the highest concentration of visitors during the first week of July. They selected an area near Bull Mountain, just outside the community of Nimblewill, for their gathering.

The Rainbow Family is a loose-knit group of people from throughout the USA and other countries. Crowds range from 2,000 to 10,000 forest visitors.

The USDA Forest Service manages the annual gathering in close coordination with state and local partners to protect the health and safety of everyone involved, and to lessen environmental impacts to the site by providing information and enforcing laws.

"We understand there may be impacts to our community, our neighbors and other forest visitors," Forest Supervisor Betty Jewett said. "We will work hard to minimize effects to our local communities and the environment. All national forest visitors are expected to obey federal, state and local laws and regulations, and we take the enforcement of these laws very seriously."

The forest resource protection plan addresses concerns about health and safety, watershed protection, natural resource protection and rehabilitation of the event site before the group leaves. The Forest Service is mobilizing a national incident management team with experience managing these types of events. The team is working in unified command with the Lumpkin County Sheriff's Office and other local authorities.

An event of this size can have significant impacts on traffic, communities, local resources, residents and visitors. Local businesses can expect to see large numbers of Rainbow Family participants visiting stores and buying food and supplies along routes to the gathering site. Forest and county roads in the Nimblewill area are expected to become congested during the event and road closures and/or traffic detours may occur.

For more information or to sign up for email updates about the Rainbow Family national gathering, visit http://www.fs.usda.gov/goto/conf/RainbowFamily.
Safety Tip for Visitors
Hazard Trees

Falling trees and branches are an ever-present hazard when traveling or camping in a forest. A hazard tree is one that has a structural defect that makes it likely to fail in whole or in part. The most effective way to prevent mishaps is to adequately prepare for the trip.

Be aware of your surroundings. Trees can fall without warning. Look up for trees with broken limbs or tops. Do not stand or camp under leaning trees.

Numerous down or leaning trees may indicate structural defects. Avoid dense patches of dead trees. Limbs and damaged trees may fall at any time. Absence of needles, bark or limbs may also indicate structural defects. The possibility of rot is indicated by conks, broken tops, basal scars, cat faces, numerous down limbs, ants or an abundance of woodpecker holes.

Cracks can develop in large branches which, although damaged, might not fall from the tree. Strong winds may weaken unstable trees. Be particularly watchful when it is windy.
Forest
Service

USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer.