Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Smoky Yosemite Park reopens

Visitors return after California wildfires closed scenic valley

- JOCELYN GECKER AND MATT BROWN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Amanda Lee Myers of The Associated Press.

Yosemite National Park reopened its scenic valley Tuesday after a nearly threeweek closure due to nearby wildfires but advised visitors to expect some smoke in the air and limited lodging and food services in the popular California park.

Meanwhile, a blaze in Montana prompted a hasty evacuation of hundreds of visitors at another national park.

At least nine homes and cabins in a historic district of Glacier National Park were destroyed in a wildfire that raged through the Montana park’s busiest area, with hundreds of summer homes, cabins and a lakefront lodge.

Park officials said the lost buildings include the socalled Big House at Kelly’s Camp, a resort developed early last century serving auto travelers along Glacier’s famous Going-to-the-Sun Road.

Glacier Conservanc­y Executive Director Doug Mitchell said it’s a “gut punch” to lose some of the park’s iconic buildings.

Firefighte­rs managed to save several historic structures that caught fire. Among them were the Lake McDonald Ranger station and the Wheeler Cabin, built by the family of Montana’s former U.S. Sen. Burton Wheeler.

The wildfires raging through parts of the West Coast have caused financial losses to parks and nearby communitie­s and also forced thousands of tourists to cancel visits.

Yosemite’s 20-day closure came during the busiest month for tourism. The park draws more than 600,000 visitors during a typical August, according to the National Park Service.

Undeterred by lingering haze, cars packed with visitors lined up at Yosemite entrance gates where tourists said they didn’t mind the slightly obscured vistas.

“It’s smoky, but you can see most of the mountains — just not the tops,” said Dutch tourist Gert Lammers, who entered a gate on the western side of the park near the town of El Portal, driving past fire crews and burned out cars and structures.

Tens of thousands of visitors from across the globe had to cancel their trips to Yosemite, which shut its famed valley on July 25 due to smoke from a nearby wildfire that has burned 150 square miles and killed two firefighte­rs since it started July 13. Though the blaze didn’t reach the heart of Yosemite Valley, it burned in remote areas of the park and choked popular areas with smoke.

Park spokesman Jamie Richards said Tuesday that Yosemite was still calculatin­g the financial impacts to the park, noting that not all campsites were reopening immediatel­y and visitors should check the park’s website to see what services were still closed.

“Yosemite Valley and the majority of Yosemite National Park is reopened to all visitors, however services within the park will be limited,” Richards said, including some lodging and food services. “We are working to get campground­s back up and running.”

A major road from the south, Highway 41, and a popular park attraction known as Glacier Point will remain closed for likely at least another week for fire operations, park officials said.

Air quality in the park will vary depending on the time of day and location.

“You are going to smell and see smoke,” Richards said, adding however that from her office in Yosemite Valley she was looking out at clear, blue skies Tuesday morning.

Visitor bureaus in the area and the park are estimating roughly $50 million in combined tourism losses, said Steve Montalto, creative director at Visit Yosemite Madera County.

“From an economic standpoint, it’s majorly significan­t to the region,” said Montalto, who visited one of the most popular attraction­s at the park, the Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias, when it reopened Monday ahead of the larger opening Tuesday.

“It’s like a big breath of fresh air to be able to get in there and explore these places again,” he said.

Officials are trying to get the word out that the park is back open. They have posted pictures of themselves and visitors at attraction­s holding red paddleboar­ds that say #YosemiteNO­W, and they’re encouragin­g visitors to do the same.

The so-called Ferguson Fire near Yosemite is one of several devastatin­g blazes in California that have killed at least a dozen people — the latest being a firefighte­r from Utah who died Monday while battling the largest fire in recorded state history north of San Francisco.

 ?? AP/GARY KAZANJIAN ?? Park Ranger Alex Martinez wears a mask Tuesday as he passes out maps and directions to visitors at the California Highway 140 gate as Yosemite National Park reopens after being closed because of wildfires.
AP/GARY KAZANJIAN Park Ranger Alex Martinez wears a mask Tuesday as he passes out maps and directions to visitors at the California Highway 140 gate as Yosemite National Park reopens after being closed because of wildfires.

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