The Province

Natural beauties turning heads

PARK ATTENDANCE: Popular sites setting new visitation records

- FELICIA FONSECA

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Many of the country’s most prominent national parks, including Grand Canyon, Yellowston­e and Zion, set new visitation records in 2015 and are bracing for what could be an even busier new year.

The U.S. National Park Service celebrates its 100th birthday in 2016 and has been urging Americans to rediscover the country’s scenic wonders or find new parks to visit through marketing campaigns that include giving free passes to every fourthgrad­er and their family.

So the attendance records could be short lived with even bigger crowds expected next year.

“Everybody’s getting psyched and ready for it,” Yellowston­e spokeswoma­n Sandra Snell-Dobert said. “We want people to have a good experience when it comes to our national parks. We’re trying to keep that wonderful experience while managing large numbers of people.”

Overall visitation to national parks is on track to hit 300 million in 2015, besting last year’s all-time high of nearly 293 million. Absent December totals, Grand Canyon in Arizona hit almost 5.3 million visits. Zion in Utah is over 3.5 million. Yellowston­e, which stretches into Wyoming, Montana and Idaho, is nearing 4.1 million. Yosemite in California was about 220,000 visits shy of the 1996 record — 4.2 million — with November and December still left to count.

The past year has meant some adjusting for parks as they manage the crowds. Yosemite lowered the entrance fees during the late fall and winter partly to encourage visitors to consider times other than the busy summer. Zion extended its shuttle bus service when the parking lots became too full for people to access the canyon. It also brought in interns to help study peak times.

The Grand Canyon opened up its residentia­l and employee entrance at the South Rim to those who already had passes over holiday weekends and plans to do the same in 2016. It has also ramped up hiring for entrance gate employees, but will move them around to other jobs so they don’t get burned out, said Grand Canyon revenue and fee business manager Marlon Avantyr.

“We survived this year pretty much unscathed, just tired, but in a good way,” he said. “We have a good plan and a good idea of what to expect, so we’re hoping to stay ahead of the curve.”

Some decisions on crowd-management will be made on the fly, said Zion spokeswoma­n Aly Baltrus.

“We’re constantly looking for what’s needed,” she said.

At nearly 5,180 square kilometres, the Grand Canyon has plenty of room for visitors to branch out for river trips, backcountr­y hikes and to dozens of lookout points. However, the South Rim remains the most popular tourist spot. Just this year, the park proposed charging at least $5 for day hikes beyond eight kilometres on major trails from the north and south rims to ease congestion.

The upcoming year will bring dark skies programs, a Theodore Roosevelt impersonat­or and historical steam engines to the Grand Canyon. But it won’t be all about the Grand Canyon. Workers will be talking up other Arizona parks that don’t get as much attention.

“Grand Canyon promotes itself,” said Vanessa Ceja-Cervantes, the park’s centennial community outreach assistant. “We have to do very little to get people to come out to the park.”

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Tourists pose for a selfie along the South Rim at Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. Throngs of tourists have been showing up in big numbers at several U.S. national parks.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Tourists pose for a selfie along the South Rim at Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. Throngs of tourists have been showing up in big numbers at several U.S. national parks.

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