A5 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 2022 Group sounds alarm on plan to cut old trees By BRADLEY W. PARKS Oregon Public Broadcasting Just steps oû the popular Pine Drops mountain bike trail west of Bend, some of the larger, older pines in the surrounding forest could soon be dropping. Blue rings of paint mark the puzzle-piece bark of the trees slated for removal in a timber sale that9s part of the years-old West Bend Project, a forest restoration eû ort that aims to guard the city from catastrophic wildû re through selective logging, mow- ing and prescribed burning on 26,000 acres of adjacent national forestland. The sale has stoked the û ames of a long-running debate in Oregon: Which trees are too big to cut? Two key stakeholders in the proj- ect 4 the U.S. Forest Ser- vice and the conservation group Oregon Wild 4 are at odds over the answer. Oregon Wild is raising concerns that several of the trees marked for removal are old growth ponderosa pine, a rarity in the project area, and that cutting them down violates guidelines laid out when the project began in 2010.