05/30/2026
Did the Off-Roaders Just Win the Biggest Public Lands Battle in Fifty Years?
By Jeff Knoll
If you spend enough time wandering the backroads of the American West, you begin to notice something peculiar. The roads almost never disappear all at once. No one arrives overnight with a gate and signs and erases a hundred years of history before breakfast. Instead, roads fade slowly, like an old cowboy whose stories become harder to hear each winter.
First comes a sign. Then, a seasonal closure. Then, a management plan, followed by a travel plan. A revision comes later. Years pass, and a gate appears where none existed before. The road is still there, winding toward the horizon as always. But now it exists in a strange bureaucratic purgatory. Maps disagree. Regulations multiply. The average citizen now needs the skills of a detective just to know if he can drive down a path his grandfather once traveled without a second thought.
This pattern of gradual disappearance has defined public lands access in America throughout my lifetime.
The battlefields were rarely dramatic. There were no Gettysburgs. No Normandy beaches. No moments of clear surrender or triumph. Losses accumulated like sand in a desert wash: grain by grain, storm by storm. One day, the landscape no longer resembled what it had been before. A trail closed here. A route erased there. A road has been decommissioned. A bridge was removed. A map revised. Each individual decision seemed insignificant. Yet, the cumulative effect was undeniable. Each generation inherited a little less freedom to explore than the one before.
The remarkable thing is how few people noticed it happening.
Hunters were busy hunting. Jeepers were busy building Jeeps. Dirt bikers rode dirt bikes. Families lived their lives. Meanwhile, deep within the machinery of federal land management, a different culture was forming. This culture increasingly views access as a problem rather than the purpose of public land ownership. Access became something to be managed, restricted, studied, litigated, or occasionally tolerated.
Edward Abbey would have recognized the pattern immediately.
Abbey understood that bureaucracies instinctively protect themselves. Their survival skills rival those of any desert species. Give an agency authority, and it seeks more authority. Give it a process, and it creates another process to oversee the first. One meeting soon leads to three more to discuss what happened at the original meeting. Along the way, paperwork gains a life of its own. It feeds and reproduces until the process overshadows the landscape it is meant to protect.
For years, this dynamic moved only one way.
The names changed. The justifications changed. The political parties changed. Yet, the outcome was consistent. More studies. More process. More restrictions. More reasons to reduce, reconsider, or delay access. Eventually, access disappeared from the conversation. The center of gravity shifted from multiple use to risk avoidance. Public access gave way to public administration. Many recreationists began to assume closures were the natural order.
That is why a seemingly dry executive order issued on May 29, 2026, should not go unnoticed.
Like a treasure buried under layers of government-speak, a decision that seemed unthinkable a few years ago lay hidden. The White House rescinded Executive Orders 11644 and 11989. These Nixon and Carter-era directives helped shape modern federal off-road vehicle policy and drove decades of access restrictions on federal lands. More importantly, the administration directed agencies to replace those policies with a framework. The new direction emphasizes access, recreation, tourism, stewardship, and multiple use.
Whether one agrees with President Trump politically is almost beside the point if you are an off-road enthusiast.
Its true impact emerges in the new question it raises.
For half a century, motorized recreationists had to defend access. Every discussion began with the assumption that roads, trails, and motorized recreation needed justification. Closure was safer. Restriction was easier. Delay was often preferred. Now, for the first time in a generation, the federal government appears to be asking a different question.
What if we've gone too far? Not too far in opening access. Too far in restricting it.
This shift should send a shockwave through the recreation community. It represents something many enthusiasts have never experienced in their lifetimes.
Momentum.
This is not the momentum of another defensive campaign. It is not another desperate effort to preserve what remains. It is not another rear-guard action, fighting one trail at a time against an unstoppable tide.
Momentum in the opposite direction. Still, this does not signal the end of the struggle. Far from it.
A single executive order will not reopen a trail tomorrow. It will not remove a gate in Montana or redraw travel management maps across the West. Environmental organizations are not surrendering. Land management agencies are not going away. The attorneys are not packing up and leaving.
Yet, what may have shifted is something even more fundamental. The direction of travel.
For fifty years, America debated what it might lose on public lands. Now, this executive order asks a new question. Someone is finally wondering what Americans should regain. That is a conversation worth having.
The environmental community understands the stakes. They know this is more than a regulatory change. It is a challenge to a land management philosophy that gained influence over decades. The fight was never just about roads or vehicles. At its core, it always centered on a bigger question.
What are public lands for?
Are they museums? Are they wildlife sanctuaries? Are they working landscapes? Are they playgrounds? Are they energy reserves? Are they agriculture timber production?
Are they places where ordinary Americans can explore, hunt, fish, camp, ride, and experience the country that belongs to them?
Historically, the answer was all of the above. Congress called it multiple use. Amidst this momentum, another pivotal possibility surfaces—one that could outweigh the order itself.
For half a century, the off-road community became skilled at fighting a retreat. Entire generations learned to defend trails, oppose closures, and challenge bad decisions. They also learned to preserve what remained. They became experts at holding ground. Every meeting, fundraiser, volunteer workday, comment letter, and court battle carried one goal: stop the bleeding.
It was necessary work, and without it, many of the places we cherish today would exist only in old photographs and stories told around tailgates. But defensive wars leave their mark on people.
Spend years fighting withdrawals, and you may start believing retreat is natural. You stop imagining victory, since preserving yesterday feels ambitious enough. The horizon shrinks. So do expectations. Whole communities quietly convince themselves that losing a little more ground each year is simply the price of modern life.
For the first time in decades, the conversation shifts. Recreationists are now asking what they might recover, not just what they must surrender. This possibility, however small, can change the mood entirely. It is the difference between a rancher repairing a fence before winter and a pioneer loading a wagon for new land. One act preserves. The other expands.
No executive action alone can dictate the future of public lands. That responsibility belongs to the people who care enough to show up.
The trail systems that survived did not survive because someone in Washington decided they were important. They survived because local clubs cleared deadfall on weekends. Volunteers built bridges. Advocates sat through endless meetings while others watched television. Organizations raised money, hired attorneys, built relationships, collected data, and refused to vanish, even when the odds were bad.
The uncomfortable truth is that many of the people reading this article have spent years standing on the sidelines. Membership cards expired. Club meetings became somebody else's responsibility. Volunteer days became somebody else's obligation. The work continued, but the number of people carrying the load grew smaller with each passing year.
Yet every road that remains open today, every trail still marked on a map, and every piece of public land still accessible by vehicle exists because someone, somewhere, decided not to sit this one out. If the winds truly are changing, then the off-road community faces a choice it has not confronted in a very long time.
It can remain a collection of spectators celebrating a victory earned by others, or it can become a movement again.
Not a movement built solely on horsepower, lockers, lift kits, and tire size debates, but one built on stewardship, participation, and the understanding that freedom on public lands has always carried obligations alongside rights. The clubs need members. The associations need volunteers. The organizations that carried the fight through the difficult years need resources and support. Not because they seek recognition, but because every advance requires people willing to leave the sidelines and take the field.
The old cavalry maxim was simple: when you hear the guns, ride toward them. For half a century, the sound echoing across the public lands debate has largely been the rumble of a fighting retreat. This week, for the first time in a generation, it sounded a little different.
Like a signal cannon. Like a messenger racing across the desert with a plume of dust hanging behind him. Like a word arriving from beyond the next ridgeline, the line has finally stopped moving backward. Whether this becomes a turning point or merely a brief pause in a much longer struggle depends entirely on what happens next.
The dust is rising on the horizon. The rider has already passed through town. The message has been delivered. Now comes the hard part. The future of public lands will belong to those willing to climb back into the saddle. Let’s Ride.