I had pretty much the same reply from Jesse, and have heard from a fellow member of the focus group that there might be some merit to it. The first complaints I am aware of came from Dave Hiatt. This one may be better off replacing lost milage somewhere else on the mountain, I really don't know. Outside of camping at the horse camp 1/2 way up one weekend when I was re routing part of Wildcat Trail, I've only been there a couple times as it's just packed with peddlers, pedestrians and equestrians. I figure as long as i'm not putting knobby tracks on their backs there, they stay away from Tahuya. We have another meeting in February, maybe we'll know more then.
I'm mostly hoping to get a break from the logging in the Tahuya, seems like the whole damn forest "ripened" all at once, and some of the most scenic (lush ferns, etc.) areas are now exposed and dry out immediately as soon as the rain lets up.
Watching this as an ongoing process is a grim reminder that we are for the most part restricted to "working" forests, meaning that there's only trails available for us to ride when the forest isn't being felled on top of them.