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PENNSYLVANIA GAME COMMSISSION
STATE GAME LANDS
0 1900 3800 5700 7600
Feet
January 2014Service Layer Credits: Copyright:© 2013 National Geographic Society, i-cubed
267BLAIR COUNTY
1 inch = 3,000 feet
ROAD CLASSIFICATIONSecondary HighwayUnimproved Road
! ElectricOil Pipeline; Gas LineOther LinePhoneSewer Line; Water LineTrail
! ! Special TrailsStream
IA Parking Area
²³F Food & Cover Crew HQ
²³G GarageL Headquarters
²³O Other
²³S Storagel Gate
YYY Tower Site
Food PlotGame Land BoundaryOther Game LandsWetland
State game land (SGL) 267 is located in Logan Township, Blair County in Wildlife Management Unit 4D and currently has a deeded acreage of 1,041 acres. Approximately 2,200 feet of Laurel Run, a cold water fishery, flows through SGL 267, and all water within this SGL is part of the Susquehanna watershed.
The Game Commission currently maintains one public parking area on SGL 267, located on Skyline Drive. There are 0.95 miles of maintained administrative roads throughout SGL 267, providing for public access to this area by foot. The farthest point on SGL 267 by foot from a parking area or public road is approximately 0.75 miles. All roads are currently closed year-round to public motor vehicle traffic and access is controlled with locked gates. The gated roads and rights-of-way provide access for hunters and avenues for hiking, wildlife photography and bird-watching.
State game land 267 is located on the Allegheny Front, the major escarpment of the Allegheny Mountains in Pennsylvania, Maryland and West Virginia. The Allegheny Front delineates the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians which lie to the east, from the Appalachian Plateau (locally called the Allegheny Plateau) to the west. The Allegheny Front is one of the windiest spots east of the Mississippi, a fact encouraging the recent establishment of nearby wind energy development. The topography of the game land is relatively level to rolling and ranges from a high point of 2,580 feet to around 2,300 feet maintaining this elevation and terrain to the north and to the south. Just off the eastern boundary, the elevation falls drastically, dropping more than 1,150 feet. The western side of this game land has a much more gradual elevation decline, dropping about 550 feet to a low point along Laurel Run.
Hunting and furtaking opportunities include white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), bear (Ursus americanus), turkey (Melagris gallopovo), ruffed grouse (Bonasa umbellus), and squirrel (Sciurus spp.). Furtaking opportunities include raccoon (Procyon lotor), coyote (Canis latrans), gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus), fisher (Martes pennanti), and bobcat (Lynx rufus). No stocking of ring-necked pheasant (Phasianus colchicus) occurs on the game land. There are no designated trails for horseback riding and mountain biking. Three gated roads and trails used for management activities and the operation of communication towers and herbaceous openings provide very nice avenues for hiking, bird watching, and other similar forms of outdoor activities.
No. 267STATE GAME LANDS
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA
PENNSYLVANIA GAME COMMISSION
SPORTSMEN'S RECREATION MAP
Each time a hunter buys a hunting license, the
money he spends goes toward many facets of
wildlife management. Since 1920, close to a million
and a half aces of State Game Lands have been
acquired with these funds. Each year nearly
$7,000,000 is spent to improve wildlife habitat.
Habitat improvements enhance living conditions for
non-game birds and mammals as well as those
species which are hunted. Pennsylvania hunters
willingly share these lands with the non-hunting
public, and with few exceptions, State Game Lands
are open for general use year round. Surveys
indicate that hunting accounts for only thirty-five
percent of game land usage. The remaining sixty-
five percent is used by the general public for non-
hunting purposes.
“Working Together for Wildlife” is a Game
Commission program providing everyone an
opportunity to help support wildlife management in
the areas for endangered and non-game animals.
Monies derived from the “Working Together for
Wildlife” Program are being used in Pennsylvania to
re-introduce the osprey, river otter, bald eagle,
peregrine falcon and provide habitat for other birds
and mammals indigenous to the Commonwealth.
Construction placement of blue bird houses on State
Game Lands provides needed homes for this
beautiful songbird. Islands in the Susquehanna River
have been set aside as propagations areas for non-
game shore birds. Numerous other projects are
planned on State Game Lands and other public
12/17/2012
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