Jim - I hope the weather was better this summer in the Tetons than in Yellowstone. We only had a few days in the 70s and much wind and rain. Am jerking out the Far West II this weekend, Which brings me to the topic of this thread: invasive species stops.
I'm struggling against my tendency to be cynical about any government program, state or federal, which is going to control the introduction of invasive species at traffic stops. Consider my limited experience so far.
I joined Bill & El at Yellowstone Lake and then took our boats to tour Big Horn Lake in Wyoming and Montana for a delightful few days of sunshine and adventure. (Edna joined us at Big Horn Lake) Arrivng in early evening after a shopping stop at Cody, we crossed the Wyoming line into Montana where we launch at Barry's Landing. There was an unmanned stop with literature near the border in Wyoming. We had heard that Wyoming was charging every boater $30 to udergo an inspection and receive a sticker - if one were boating in wyomng waters.
Upon returning to Yellowstone with the boat - Bill and El stayed on the water for a few more days - Edna went back home and I started trailering back to Yellowstone Lake. The stop at the Wyomng/ Montana border was now manned. We stopped to go through inspection, answered some questions and asked some. We didn't have to purchase the $30 dollar sticker because we weren't boating in Wyoming.
Then, 60 miles later at the west end of Cody, I ran into another stop for invasive species. Two in one day! At Yellowstone Lake this summer, a volunteer checks boats out before they are launched. Of course he works an 8 hour shift, so anyone launching before or after will miss the inspection.
Montana doesn't stop boats for inspection. Now some opinions. Educating the boating public is necessary. How to do it is the problem.
Anyone wishing to avoid an inspection just has to wait until the inspection station is closed and then drive by. With the mobility of our boating public, stopping an invasive species from hitching a ride on a boat, motor, or trailer seems impossible.
We who live and boat in western waters where our boats are stored in below zero weather will not transmit invasive species. The research shows the microscopic critters can't survive that degree of cold.
Then there is the issue of states where the species live and states where they don't live. I can envision special dipping pools of critter killing solutions at state borders where the boat and trailer are driven through, engine run for a while, etc.
Is this going to become a revenue enhancement process where thousands of new government jobs are going to be created? Is this a problem without a solution? I certainly don't have any answers to the invasive species problem. Just plenty of questions. John