โApr-01-2021 06:56 PM
โApr-11-2021 02:27 PM
โApr-11-2021 01:01 PM
โApr-11-2021 12:32 PM
โApr-11-2021 11:37 AM
โApr-08-2021 09:47 PM
naturist wrote:
In contrast to our visit to Glacier NP ten years ago, which I posted about above, was our visit to Denali NP in Alaska in June of 2019. For those who have never been there, you can't just drive in and wander around. Although the park is vast, one of the larger ones in the world, you can only drive into the edge of the park. From there, getting into the interior of the park requires a shuttle bus ride. The longest bus trip into the park, that takes you as close to the mountain itself, is an approximately 10 hour round trip.
โApr-05-2021 05:21 PM
โApr-05-2021 08:43 AM
FWC wrote:
For context, those that enjoy the backcountry of the National Parks have dealt with limited numbers, permits and lotteries for a long time. Yes it can be disappointing when you can't get the backpacking, rafting, climbing or canyoneering trip on the day you wanted (or at all). But most agree that for the wilderness to remain wild, you need to manage the visitation and impact and can't have a free-for-all.
I personally would prefer to have a less frequent but experience-of-a-lifetime type experience in the wilderness than to be able to go whenever I want and have to play bumper boats on the Grand or race people for campsites on the Teton Crest Trail. Obviously visitation will be higher and the experience is less wild in the front country, but it still comes to the point where the crowding detracts from the experience for everyone.
One thing I do hope is that if/when they do go to reserved/permitted entry, that the commercial operators don't get to jump the queue. This is a huge issue with backcountry use, where a certain percentage of permitts are reserved for a small number of commercial operators, meaning they are not available to the general public.
โApr-05-2021 08:41 AM
FWC wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
Other than this past year, which is an anomaly, many of the parks are heavily traveled by foreigners. Particularly they busiest parks.
Nothing xenophobic about it. As the owners, citizens should have first access if we need to reduce numbers as you suggest.
Will we have to show our papers to enter the parks?
Even before the pandemic, foreign visitors made up 9% of the visitation to Glacier, and only 6% of visitation to Zion, so restricting foreign visitation will not solve the issue.
I believe that sharing the worlds cultural and natural treasures brings people together. It would be really sad if Egypt decided to no longer let foreigners into Giza, France no longer let foreigners visit the Louvre and Australia no longer let foreigners visit the Great Barrier Reef.
โApr-05-2021 06:22 AM
โApr-05-2021 05:44 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
Other than this past year, which is an anomaly, many of the parks are heavily traveled by foreigners. Particularly they busiest parks.
Nothing xenophobic about it. As the owners, citizens should have first access if we need to reduce numbers as you suggest.
โApr-05-2021 04:04 AM
FWC wrote:
Besides the obvious xenophobia, I am not sure how this would even address the issue. Over the last year there have been near zero foreign visitors, yet the crowds have been worse than ever.bgum wrote:
I am sure that this will get a warm reception: It has been suggested that usa citizens or at least usa residents have unrestricted entry but noncitizens have ticketed entry.
โApr-04-2021 09:31 PM
โApr-04-2021 05:13 AM
FWC wrote:
I am not sure the 'state of CO' has done anything to Royal Gorge Bridge - it is a privately owned tourist trap.
โApr-03-2021 08:42 AM