There is a difference between a loose dog on the street and a loose dog on the trails.
When it comes down to it.....We see off leash dogs on various trails almost 2-3 times weekly and there has NEVER been an issue.
If I am the one who will suffer a ticket for walking my dogs off leash why does it bother you people so much? I will accept my punishment from all the rangers (who wave and drive past me every time they see me and often times chat with us) when the time comes.
We encounter people walking their dogs without leashes all the time while patrolling Blue Ridge and Table Mountain. It has never really been an issue. As our rig approaches the owners have always demonstrated control of their animals by commanding them to stop, sit or come back to them and we will often chat with them about their dogs. Only once have we, my partner and I, asked an owner to leash their dog. I have never seen or encountered a situation such as the one that started this thread. If there was more foot traffic and we saw the potential for problems, we would ask more people to leash their animals.
Speaking for myself, I'm more concerned with dogs running loose in campgrounds or parking areas where they may be a nuisance to the public or in danger of being hit by a car. Of course I'm just a volunteer. The paid USFS Rangers, FPO Officers or LEOs out of Big Pines or Area 12 may not be as forgiving or lenient.
I believe there is some confusion as to the leash law in the Angeles National Forest. Dogs are not required to be on a leash anywhere in the National Forest. Only if they are on trails, in campgrounds, parking lots, or other areas where the public congregates. I suppose "technically" if you were walking along the trail but your dog was running all over the mountain side, you wouldn't be in violation of the leash law.
In those areas described above dogs are required to be restrained by a leash of no longer than 6 feet. Violation of Section 261.8 Fish and Wildlife (d), "possesing a dog not on a leash or otherwise confined", is a $50 fine.
[Title 36 - Parks, Forest and Public Property Chapter II - Forest Service, Department of Agriculture Part 261 - Prohibitions]It is also "technically" illegal to remove snow or pinecones from the National Forest. I know for a fact that nobody with the USFS out of Big Pines, either Paid or Volunteer, has hassled anybody about that.
