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All visitors pass into the reserve through its gate house, where you register. There are trails around D'Silva, and with prior permission from the Forest Department (08-22079) you can stay at its basic campsite. There are several resorts in and around the reserve, some of which run kayaking and horse riding trips. Alternatively the Forest Reserve can be explored on one of the many day tours run from San Ignacio. The reserve is open daily from 8arn to 5pm. Please note though, there is an extremely high fire risk in the dry season, and you must take extra care to avoid any chance of starting fires. The reserve is becoming increasingly popular as a tourist and recreation destination. Informal recreation facilities are provided at the Rio On Pools and Rio Frio Cave, and a campsite at D'Silva Forest Station has been up-graded. The nature trail network in existence since 1989 has been expanded with adjacent trees labelled with both local and scientific names. In addition to these facilities, previous Government initiatives have been made to boost private tourism in the reserve. Visitors to the Mayan site Caracol have to pass through Mountain Pine Ridge. Access is via the Chiquibul Road and the Cristo Rey Road, both off the Western Highway. The reserve itself is dissected by several roads, tracks, and trails, used for forest management, and some of which are open to visitors.
Little is known of the area's early history. It
appears Hooper's visit (1887) was the first by a forester, when the site
was still known as the Great South Pine Ridge. Hummel (1921) in a report
which is regarded as the standard work on the forests of Belize, makes no
specific reference to the area, despite the fact that logging was already
taking place in the adjacent Chiquibul, which could only be reached
through Mountain Pine Ridge. The reserve was designated in October 1944 as
a protection forest covering 1504W acres (SR & 0 56). Fire control was
introduced the next year, but practically the whole area was burnt in
1949, demonstrating the inadequacy of the management infrastructure as it
stood. Most of the older pine of the new generation dates apparently from
this event. It was re-classified a production forest in 1952, and
impressive advances were made in infrastructure provision (e.g. airstrip
1954), fire control and road building. For the first time, with
improvements in the Augustine to Cayo road, timber could be shipped out of
the reserve all year round. It is probably true to say that the work done
in the 1950s ... marks the zenith of the FD's achievements over the
years'. An enumeration of the granite basin was carried out in 1953 and in
1955 the first long term felling license was issued In 1956 a Working Plan
was drawn up for the whole reserve. During the 1950s there were a number
of revisions made to the reserve area, these being the result of
progressively more accurate mapping. In May 1959 the reserve boundary was
completely redefined in accordance with recommendations, when the reserve
was adjusted to better match geographic and administrative boundaries (FD
1959, para. 8). At this time, its area became 132534 (the area lost
becoming part of the Sibun Forest Reserve). An excision of 1408 acres was
made in 1965 to provide space for tourist developments, but this only
seems to have resulted in a new SI in 1977 (SI 49) when the reserve area
was reduced to 127203 acres. Subsequently 840 acres were leased to farmers
from San Antonio in 1990. This latter boundary change has not been
formalized by statute. 650 acres (presumably the same land) are now being
used by the San Antonio Grain Growers Association. A hunting ban has been
imposed in the reserve since 1978.Originally, the reserve was declared to protect natural pine forests from fire, grazing and cultivation and to secure natural regeneration. Other considerations were the management and conservation of the forest and the conservation of soil and water resources. In the 1970s, its nature conservation function. was recognized, and in the contemporary management approach, designation also enables controlled access to important recreation sites. HABITATS Pine forest (80%) and broadleaf (including gallery) forest (20%) HOLDRIDGE LIFE
ZONE The only sizeable permanent settlement in the reserve is D'Silva (formerly known as Augustine) forest station (population 268), the administrative headquarters of the FD Western Division. Its growth rate has declined over recent decades with the tendency for families to re-locate to San Ignacio and Santa Elena, leaving employees to commute on a daily or weekly basis. The logging settlement of San Luis (previous population 103) which was also located in the reserve, 6 miles south of D'Silva, has been abandoned following cessation of timber extraction. San Antonio village is in close proximity to the reserve (population 996), and its farmers are cultivating land within the reserve. The majority of the reserve is on a granite massif, intruded and uplifted into a sedimentary series that now remains as a ring of metamorphics around the granite. Some areas of limestone remain in the west of the reserve as remnants of an extensive plateau that was laid over the granite and metamorphics during periods of higher sea level during the Jurassic. They form typical karstic topography with moderately rough landforms and steep slopes. Sink holes and cave systems are frequent here. The central granite basin displays increasingly broken and rough topography from west to east. The metasediments in the east of the reserve contain very rough topography. The main river which drams north, is the Macal River (it forms the western and southern boundary of the reserve). A number of tributaries join it from the east, including the Rio On, Rio Frio, Privassion Creek, Piviol Creek, and Oak, Bum. The Rio Frio Cave is a limestone cavern through which the Rio On flows for 76 yards. The Pao On waterfalls area is where the river flows over granite outcrops in a long attractive series of rapids and cascades. With the exception of a small number of streams in the northeast which flow into Upper Barton Creek, all rivers flow into the Macal River (part of the Belize Rim drainage). Elevation in the reserve ranges between 3336 feet al Baldy Beacon and 394 feet on the Macal River at Black Rock. The central granite block lies al an average of between 1312-2296 feet.
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