Our National Parks: Yosemite National Park Box 577, Yosemite National Park, CA 95389 The Big Picture: Ever since white men stumbled into Yosemite Valley in 1833, people have been falling hard for the place, perhaps because nowhere else in North America could they do so much oohing and aahing in one place–over the granite monuments, the sweeping meadows, the alpine lakes, the jagged Sierra Nevada, and three of the world’s ten Where Everyone Goes: Straight to Yosemite Valley, a seven-mile long, three-quarter-mile-wide swath that encompasses El Capitan, Half Dome, Glacier Point, Mirror Lake, Cathedral Rocks, Cathedral Spires, Royal Arches, 750 campsites, 1,500 hotel rooms, 11 restaurants, and approximately 4,500 parking spaces. Where You Should Go: As far from the Valley and high season (June to September) as possible. About 600 of Yosemite’s 750 miles of trails traverse the backcountry, which isn’t all that remote: You generally have to hike only three or four miles from a trailhead to lose the mob. Backcountry campsites are basically wherever you pitch your tent, as Some prime backcountry is in the park’s northern reaches, from Tuolumne Meadows up into the Sierra high country. Naturalists from the Yosemite Association lead trips in this area ($569 per person for seven days; 209-379-2321), and in summer the Yosemite Mountaineering School takes a vacation from the snobby El Cap/Half Dome climbing scene and relocates at Tuolumne (basic rock Don’t Forget: Industrial-strength food containers. The odds are that one in seven Yosemite backpackers will have a confrontation with a bear. Where to Bunk: The High Sierra Camps, which are open from early July until early September ($73 per person; 209-254-2002), if you can get them. For archetypal park-lodge splendor, reserve a room a year in advance at the Ahwahnee Hotel, near Royal Arches ($200 for a double; 209-252-4848). Food Is: Dandy at the Ahwahnee. The Four Seasons, however, is known locally as the Foul Seasons. Rangers prefer the Elderberry House, 30 miles south in Oakhurst. Park Lore: Now that Yosemite Valley is a law-and-order kind of place, rangers can safely chuckle about the weekend of July 4, 1970. Hundreds of hippies converged on Stoneman Meadow and proceeded to have sex in the open, ingest hallucinogenic mushrooms, dance naked, and drive out their more bourgeois fellow campers. Rangers were called in, and a Your Park Service at Work: Consider this: Yosemite’s appropriations for science last year–between $120,000 and $200,000, depending on which park official you talk to–were less than its budget for tree removal. There is only one research-grade scientist on staff, and he spends just 55 to 65 percent of his time researching–the rest of the time he Where the money goes: Flashlight Reading: The Yosemite, by John Muir (Random House, $9.95); Yosemite National Park: A Natural History Guide to Yosemite and Its Trails, by Jeffrey Schaffer (Wilderness Press, $18.95); and Yosemite–The Embattled Wilderness, by Al Runte (University of Nebraska Press, $24.95). Fun Index: Provided you visit in the off-season or on weekdays, or stick to the backcountry, 5 |
Our National Parks: Yosemite National Park
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