October 31, 2009
Spice Run Wilderness: Truly wild, wonderful W.Va.
Kenny Kemp
Spice Fields, a pine-rimmed clearing a short distance from the eastern boundary of the Spice Run Wilderness, offers visitors a rare stretch of open land.
Kenny Kemp
Simply getting to West Virginia's wildest wilderness area is an adventure in itself.
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Take an audio slideshow visit to Spice Run here or see player below.

NEOLA, W.Va. -- Simply getting to West Virginia's wildest wilderness area is an adventure in itself.

No roads lead into the newly created Spice Run Wilderness, a 10-square-mile expanse of the Monongahela National Forest straddling the Greenbrier-Pocahontas county line northwest of Neola. Once you find your way to the edge of the wilderness, there are no trails to guide you into its interior.

According to a National Wilderness Preservation System fact sheet, Spice Run "can be accessed by canoe or kayak on the Greenbrier River," or by "crossing the Greenbrier River on foot from the Greenbrier River Trail," a feat recommended only during periods of low flow.

A dirt road approaches the wilderness boundary from the south at Slab Camp Mountain, and a road passable by high-clearance four-wheel-drive vehicles passes near the eastern boundary of the wilderness from Calvin Price State Forest - the most remote unit of the state park/state forest system.

The easiest access is available near the southeastern corner of the wilderness, via a dirt road extending northward from the end of the hardtop on Little Creek Road, which forks off Anthony Creek Road a few miles west of its junction with W.Va. 92 near Neola. Once a National Forest boundary sign is passed after driving over several miles of mudholes and ruts, the Spice Run Wilderness begins 150 feet to the west of the road. High-clearance vehicles are recommended for this route.

By hiking a few hundred yards along gated Forest Road 934 to the left of the Little Creek Road extension, easy access is achieved to the headwaters of Spice Run, one of at least two native brook trout streams in the wilderness area. The creek flows across the road, which dead-ends at nearby Spice Fields, a clearing created by the Forest Service years ago to enhance wildlife habitat. In keeping with the wilderness standards, Forest Road 934 eventually will be ripped up and seeded to native grasses and the wildlife clearing no will longer be maintained.

Trouble viewing slideshow? You can also view it at media.cnpapers.com/spicerun

 From Spice Fields near the eastern border of wilderness area, it takes about four miles of bushwhacking to reach its western boundary on the Greenbrier River. The absence of trails makes hiking a challenge. While following Spice Run can keep hikers from getting lost, it's a creek that's surrounded by dense brush and pine thickets, and banks that have been rendered marshy by beaver dams. Having to scan the landscape closely for good footing makes travelers more aware of things like late-season mushrooms, intricate ferns and mosses, and animal droppings - including a number of impressive specimens left by bears and coyotes.

The stream Spice Run serves as the boundary line separating Greenbrier and Pocahontas counties from the Greenbrier River to its headwaters. Davy Run, which flows from the wilderness area into the Greenbrier a few miles south of Spice Run, also is a native brook trout stream.

Turkey, grouse, deer and black bear are among game animals inhabiting the wilderness area.

"Spice Run doesn't really have anything more unique than any other area in the forest - but I've seen a bear every time I've been there," said Eric Sandeno, the recreation and wilderness programs manager for the Monongahela National Forest.

"It is our least accessible wilderness area," Sandeno said. "The one road that comes along its eastern edge has been chewed up by trucks and is not in the best condition. It's our only wilderness area without trails, and no trails are planned in Spice Run. Nature and solitude are its predominant features. For this area, it's a new and unique opportunity for recreationists."

According to Monongahela National Forest policy, its wilderness areas are managed to offer visitors "challenge, discovery and self-reliance." Management is geared toward resource protection, rather than visitor convenience, allowing those who travel in wilderness areas to "meet nature on its terms, not modify it to suit your own."

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Posted By: specialed5000 (1:36pm 11-03-2009)
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Of course being a federally protected wilderness area means that it can't be mined or drilled. Even if there is coal or gas of recoverable value here (Doubtful, there has never been any coal mining within miles of here, and no gas wells anywhere in that part of the state. The only coal in Greenbrier country is in the far northern, and north western section, miles from here, in a different geologic region and at mostly higher altitudes).

Even if mineral rights were ever separated from surface rights, and then, even if the Forest Service didn't already own mineral rights, the only way anyone could try to exercise mineral rights in protected wilderness would be with a mule drawn cart and a shovel, or an act or Congress to grant an exception, which isn't going to happen.

Posted By: chico (5:28am 11-03-2009)
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Just because it is designated wilderness does not mean that it cannot be mined or drilled. Wilderness protections protects the surface, mineral rights must be bought as well to protect them from being extracted...

Posted By: Forest Walker (7:47pm 11-02-2009)
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I first hiked in Spice Run the late 80s, when it was somewhat protected, but not completely. The Spice Meadow was a rutted mess from trucks and four-wheelers. Spice Ridge had a muddy truckway for a good part of its length, with even a few semi-permanent encampments. Someone had a huge impact there. So I'm glad the Wilderness designation closes these roads. I long for those wild, West Virginia hills.

Posted By: WVU Techie (7:42pm 11-02-2009)
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@DavisJms7, @conniesloan:
The National Forest has owned this land for some time. They have said they aren't planning to build trails, and if they aren't going to do it, it's not going to happen.

The land is federally protected wilderness. It cannot be drilled or mined without an act of Congress to remove the wilderness designation.

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