Shadow Catcher wrote:Yosemite is one park that is being loved to death. I know the National Park service was at one time considering the ban of cars in the valley and the access would be by train. There is a RR right of way that makes it as far as the Hetch Hetchy dam starting in Tuolumne built in the 1800's as the Hetch Hetchy and Yosemite Valley Railroad and eventually became the West Side Lumber Company after then dam was built.
myoung wrote:We've had the pleasure of climbing Half Dome twice and did so in the company of friends. I doubt that we could have anticipated the exact date of the climbs months in advance and certainly it would have been problematic if we had to enter a lottery only to find that our plans had been crushed by the limitations in whole or in part.
While many folks intend to climb all the way to the top, many are intimidated when they reach the summit of "Quarter Dome" and gaze up at the slick face of the last 400-foot climb along a cable with few footholds other than the 2x4s that are laid crosswise.
To experience Half Dome even if you don't climb to the top is something that should be available to all visitors (and citizens). It's an unforgettable experience. And, don't we pay for these opportunities already?
I'm reminded of old photographs that show wealthy folk picnicking below Vernal Falls. Back in those days only people with enough money for staff and transportation could experience the beauty of our National Parks. Since then, our NPs have been available to all regardless of fortune or luck. In essence, our parklands have increased many fold with access to all.
Now, sadly, the trend is to restrict parks and thereby diminish the opportunities and pleasures of our citizens and visitors from around the world. This is not a good thing.
myoung wrote:
Now, sadly, the trend is to restrict parks and thereby diminish the opportunities and pleasures of our citizens and visitors from around the world. This is not a good thing.
myoung wrote:Reservations at National Parks merely to hike trails is of recent vintage.
myoung wrote: there are no facilities requiring maintenance or supervision. I just don't understand the reason for the reservation system if not to satisfy some highfalutin complaint that there are just too many people around spoiling the experience of a privileged few.
myoung wrote: Those who would restrict access to our National Park lands are simply depriving people of the experience of visiting the Parks except in government approved ways. How is this not elitist?
myoung wrote: Enjoyment of our land should not be restricted to those deemed acceptable to gatekeepers and their henchmen, the Sierra Club and similar elitists. We need more access not less. Respect and appreciation of the land comes from experiencing it.
myoung wrote:To limit those experiences is to limit support for continued existence of the Parks themselves.
halfdome, Danny wrote:[color=#4000FF][i][b]I believe the lottery system to hike Half Dome is not a money making proposition for the park system but a way to limit the amount of people on the cables.
myoung wrote:Okay, Gary, here are some crazy ideas. If reservation systems cost money so that fees have to be collected to recover costs or minimize losses, then simply eliminate the reservation system. No reservation system; no cost; no loss. Case closed.
myoung wrote:Scalpers... Pretty simple common sense eliminates it.
myoung wrote: Clearly we have different beliefs about what it means to live in a free society. So let's agree to disagree rather than trying to impugn the motives or understanding or knowledge of one another.
halfdome, Danny wrote:Gary, I was speaking in general and not to you specifically about the money making issue, so it's not a problem here.
StPatron wrote: And, the bamboo camper shell.. what a hoot! It's no wonder your builds are primo... with experience going back that far.![]()
Thanks again for the wonderful story!
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