Posts tagged #park visitors

Build That Wall

Canyonlands National Park, January 2013

Canyonlands National Park, January 2013

No, wilderness is not a luxury but necessity of the human spirit, and as vital to our lives as water and good bread. A civilization which destroys what little remains of the wild, the spare, the original, is cutting itself off from its origins and betraying the principle of civilization itself
— Edward Abbey - Desert Solitaire 1968

Wednesday Thoughts

Destruction of Humanity and the Ecosystem

I get scared when I hear the chanting from Trump and his supporters of “build that wall” that echoes the building of walls in other places, such as Germany during the Hitler era. It upsets and scares me when some people fail to see the resemblance between Trumps building of the wall, and Hitlers wall. In the past, different presidents have modified and created bills that are then being put into laws, for instance the Wilderness Act or the Clean Water Act. Most presidents have worked for, and not against the environment. Currently with this government we are moving backwards and not forward. We are bypassing laws that longterm is supposed to benefit us, laws like the Clean Air Act that was put into place to reduce the amount of air pollution, to make the world a better place for us. After all we (the US) now have a president who doesn’t believe in global warming or at least fails to understand what the difference between climate and weather really is. He fails to acknowledge the importance and the value of nature, as many environmentalists were trying to describe as “the New Eden” to others back in the day. The very reason that made many areas protected during the 1800’s.

Saving an Ecosystem

But it is not only areas like the Rio Grande (as you can see in the video above) that are facing a milestone change under this current government. Areas like the Big Bend would face an equally devastating effect of a physical border wall between the US and Mexico. How do you build a wall but still allow animals to travel through? How do we save something so precious from being further developed? At the same time we have to start thinking about our protected areas, our National Parks. Right now people are allowed to roam free through these protected areas because of the government shutdown, that is specifically caused by the wall. People currently destroy these areas, litter here and there, toilets are not available, and many many people are just blown away by the fact parks remain open. No one runs the parks. During previous longer (although this is the longest in history) shutdowns, National Parks and Monuments have been closed for this very reason, but that was also under other presidents. We are facing an even bigger problem though. With nature and the wilderness experience becoming such a popular thing, many National Parks are breaking visitation records every single year, and with that comes the problem of overcrowding. Yellowstone National Park has seen an increase by almost 40% since 2008 (well, the real number is 34%). They have already started to struggle with the number of toilets available for so many visitors. We have also seen issues where people lack understanding about wildlife, and how you should behave in the park and around wildlife. At the same time as the visitor numbers are increasing, Trump wants to cut the funding to National Parks. Even though some of Trumps proposals get shutdown before he can say “National Park”, it does show his true intentions regarding wilderness. The coming years will be crucial for determining how our parks, monuments, and forests will be taken care of and preserved.

Yellowstone National Park, May 2014

Yellowstone National Park, May 2014

Do you have a favorite park you are starting to feel concerned about?

Desert Solitaire - Canyonlands Edition

 

Flashback Friday

Roadtrip

    A few years ago W and I went on a long roadtrip. We started in Bozeman and drove all the way down to Las Vegas, with a stop in the desert, in Canyonlands and Island in the sky. We drove through the outskirts of Yellowstone, down through the mighty Tetons and through snow and ice storms. I think our route looked something like this:

 
 

Canyonlands, Island in the Sky

    I had never ever been to an environment like that in my whole life so I was pretty excited to go. As always, our travels happen during winter break, but that is usually the best time to go, because no one else goes. This January in 2013 happened to be the coldest January in several years, I feel like this was a common theme for my winter travels from Alaska, I managed to go somewhere else where it was colder than Alaska, every single time. Driving towards Canyonlands was so breathtaking to me, these sandstone creations in the middle of the desert were piling up like large red stone thrones through the seemingly otherwise flat landscape.

 
 

Ice cold nights 

-As soon as the darkness fell over us, these red stone thrones turned into different shades of darkness

 

    We seemed to be the only people camping in Canyonlands, at least based on the zero other cars at our camping spot, and the lack of gear in the few other cars we saw during the day. We arrived at our campsite and decided to have something to eat and watch the sunset. There were a few other people there too, but as soon as the darkness fell over us and these red stone thrones turned into different shades of darkness we were the only people left. Temperatures dropped down towards 10 and 20 below and with it being so dark already we decided to sleep in the car, because it would be warmer we thought. That was one of the coldest nights I have experienced, my guess is that the metal in the car insulated the cold air whole lot more than a tent would have done. 

Murphy Trail

    We went hiking during our time in Canyonlands, we picked out a route that seemed fairly easy, short and interesting. No one else could be seen out there, absolutely empty, just us and the stone thrones. During the day it got warmer, and while we hiked with hats and gloves, jackets were not really needed. 

 
 

National Parks are becoming Popular

    In January 2013 when we were camping in Island in the sky (that is a part of Canyonlands), the total number of campers, in a tent, was 90 (in all of Canyonlands). The total number of visitors was only 3617 (only 2700 in Island in the sky). In May 2013 the total visits that year was 75000 (51000 in Island in the sky), so quite a few more during peak season. The last few years the number of people that are visiting national parks in the US has sky rocketed! But the people that are representing that increase in visitors are retired white folks, so not an increase in younger visitors, which I would have thought. Total number of visitors in May 2016 to Canyonlands was at 128000, a lot more than in 2013, and in January this year (2017) they had 7400 visitors, but still only 147 people sleeping in a tent. Can you guess which national park in the US has the most visitors? I can give you one clue, which may or may not help. I have never been to that national park. You can read the answer at the bottom of this page :)

 
 

Most visited National Park

    So, what national park receives the most recreational visitors? Well the answer is, Great Smoky Mountain National Park. It received a whopping 11 MILLION visitors in 2016. Yellowstone National Park only received 4 million visitors and Denali? A little over half a million. 

    Are you going to visit any of these national parks this year?