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Mr. Mark Anderson

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Philmont Scout Ranch
New Mexico
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1-10 of 32 online sources for Mark Anderson

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    www.scoutingmagazine.org/issues/0801/d-lett.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2008    Last Visited: 4/14/2008  

    Mark Anderson, director of program at Philmont Scout Ranch responds: Batteries and many other items have a smell.

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    philstaff.com/blog/2007/04/02/2007-spring-capital-campa - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 4/2/2007    Last Visited: 11/8/2007  

    As the April issue of HIGH COUNTRY goes to press, Philmont Director of Program Mark Anderson and Property and Facilities Superintendant Jim Kutz are meeting with architects to iron out the details for the new Staff Activity Center.

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    www.stephenbraunlich.com/godscountry/?p=32 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/27/2007    Last Visited: 5/27/2007  

    We're getting regular rains and there is still snow in the high country, enough so that parts of it are closed off for the time being. (According to Director of Program Mark Anderson there is "still several feet of snow at Copper Park.")

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    www.troop405.org/eaglelist/index.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/13/2007    Last Visited: 3/17/2007  

    Mr. Mark AndersonDirector of ProgramPhilmont Scout Ranch17 Deer Run RoadCimarron NM 87714

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    ABQjournal: Bear That Attacked Scouts Killed - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/3/2001    Last Visited: 7/5/2001  

    The bear visited the campsite three times , rummaging through the cooking area the second time and attacking the third , said Mark Anderson , ranch program director.Authorities believe the bear was attracted to the campsite by a plant called aromatic sumac , which is bursting with seed that bears feed on.Then it was drawn into the camp by a bag of vomit one scout brought.To a bear , anything that smells is food , Game and Fish officials said.

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    ABQjournal: Fire Tightens Camp Space for Boy Scouts - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 6/10/2002    Last Visited: 6/10/2002  

    "It's a huge fire and it's going to take a long time to be out, and we won't send anyone into that area until it is ruled safe, and that's a long time off," the ranch's program manager, Mark Anderson, said Friday.

    The challenge: put the same number of scouts into two-thirds of the territory.

    But Philmont's camps weren't full before the fire squeezed its territory, Anderson said.

    "We've got space for them. . . . The challenge is to make sure we're counting and that on any one night we still have enough campsites," he said.

    Philmont, in the rugged Sangre de Cristo mountains of northern New Mexico, encompasses mountains, canyons, meadows and valleys, and offers what the Boy Scouts refer to as "a mountaintop high-adventure experience."Hikers can pass from high desert at about 6,500 feet to alpine meadows at 12,000 feet.

    Hundreds of thousands of scouts have come to Philmont since Oklahoma oilman Waite Phillips donated part of his ranch to the Boy Scouts in 1938.This year, Philmont expects to pass the mark of 750,000 visitors.

    ...
    "We intend to provide the same type of magical experience kids have had for years and years and years, even though there will be different plans on doing that," Anderson said."The staff is motivated and enthusiastic and ready to start doing our job and fulfilling some dreams."

    None of the ranch's campsites had burned as of Friday morning, he said.

    "We have not lost any backcountry buildings that we use for camps," Anderson said.The fire burned two sheds where the ranch stored tack for horse programs and an old cow camp facility not used for scout programs.

    Anderson, who has taken reconnaissance flights over the fire, said he was surprised how much areas of green dotted burned areas, islands of forest that eventually could be hiked to across charred areas.

    The fire affects everyone at Philmont because there will be more crews

    - groups of seven to 12 scouts

    - using a smaller space, Anderson said.

    "Every crew is going to have some impact because of additional people in the area that they're hiking," he said.

    One positive point: "There'll be more opportunity for fellowship," he said.

    Philmont normally has 35 "itineraries," the term used for backcountry treks.About 14 routes normally cross the backcountry in the now-closed northern portions of the ranch.However, the ranch already was modifying a few of those because dry conditions had prompted the Carson National Forest earlier to close the Valle Vidal to recreation.

    Ranch officials were spending Friday figuring out new routes and campsites for everyone along the 330 to 350 miles of trails, Anderson said.The first 300 scouts and leaders are expected Sunday; 300 to 350 more will arrive daily throughout the summer and will be sent out on treks.

    Anderson could not say what percentage of the hiking trails lie in the ranch's north areas.

    Philmont tries to balance hikes throughout the ranch, with each route divided by degree of difficulty.Anderson said officials will try to keep that in mind as they shift hikes, "so there are still challenging hikes in the central and south" parts of the ranch.

    The smoke from the fire is having little affect.The direction of the prevailing winds means that unless a front moves through to flip winds around, smoke from the north part of the ranch doesn't generally drift to the rest of the territory.

    Nonetheless, Philmont's medical staff has warned that due to the possibility of smoke during the first part of the summer, people with respiratory diseases such as asthma or bronchitis should talk to their doctor about the advisability of going to the ranch.

    >

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    Boy Scouts of America SFBAC San Francisco Bay Area... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2002    Last Visited: 7/22/2006  

    "We had a little more than 28,000 acres inside the fire zone," said Mark Anderson, Philmont's director of program.
    ...
    "We seeded 8,000 acres by air using four different kinds of grass seed," Anderson explained.

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    Federal Budget: Amtrak loss could hurt Philmont - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/13/2003    Last Visited: 2/14/2003  

    CIMARRON - "Kids have been coming to the ranch (Philmont) by train since 1939, the first season we had camping participants," said Philmont Program Director Mark Anderson.

    "About one-fifth of our total participants (4,000) would have to find other transportation options.Some of the discount options Amtrak offers make it very reasonable for groups.Discontinuing train service to Raton could add to the cost for Boy Scout troops coming to participate."

    Thursday, Feb. 6, Rep.

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    Forest Service grapples with Valle Vidal future - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/17/2005    Last Visited: 8/23/2008  

    Mark Anderson, program manager for Philmont Scout Ranch, discussed how thousands of Boy Scouts use the Valle Vidal.Every summer, 22,000 visitors, 5,000 participants in Boy Scout training facilities and 1,016 seasonal staff descend upon Philmont.Anderson said this summer, Philmont expects about 2,000 Boy Scouts will visit the Valle Vidal.

    The Valle Vidal provides Scouts with unique training and educational opportunities."We practice 'leave no trace' principles," Anderson said, "What a great place to learn that practice."

    Additionally, every Scout who uses the Valle Vidal must volunteer at least 3 hours on conservation projects in the unit.To date, Anderson estimated Scouts have dedicated 69,000 volunteer hours to projects including fire rehabilitation efforts, streambed and watershed improvements and erosion barriers.

    Scouts who visit the Valle Vidal have the opportunity to participate in educational programs at three staff camps in the unit, including mountain biking, astronomy, environmental awareness and search and rescue.

    According to Anderson, "Our partnership with the Forest Service has been a positive one.The Valle Vidal has become an important part of the Philmont experience."He added, "The chance to see that elk herd is a life experience."

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    High Desert Canyons, Granite Spires, and All the Guts... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 6/8/2006    Last Visited: 6/8/2006  

    Nearly 2,000 teens and adult scout leaders have completed the High Adventure Base program at the TFWC over the past two summers. ,Things are going great,, says Mark Anderson, who oversees the program for the BSA.He is program director at the Philmont Scout Ranch in northern New Mexico.
    ...
    Anderson says he expects 1,300 participants at the Double H during the 2006 summer camping season, which runs June 21 to August 2.There are still openings for 2006, but Anderson says that after the Double H High Adventure Base is incorporated into the Philmont reservation system in 2007, he feels certain it will sell out with 2,000 scouts participating each summer. ,We,re going at full tilt.,

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