East Bay Times

Yosemite National Park to reopen today, with more campsites available

High smoke levels closed park last week, but the air is clearing

- By Paul Rogers progers@ bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact Paul Rogers at 408-920- 5045.

After being closed since last week because of hazardous levels of wildfire smoke, Yosemite National Park will reopen to the public at 9 a.m. today.

Pa rk officials said Wednesday afternoon that conditions have improved since Sept. 17, when the park was closed because smoke levels were so thick from nearby wildfires in the Sierra Nevada that it was unhealthfu­l for park workers or visitors to be outside.

“I’m looking at Bridalveil Fall right now,” said Scott Gediman, a Yosemite spokesman, Wednesday. “Air quality has significan­tly improved since (Sept. 17). It was clear with blue skies this morning. It’s a little hazier this afternoon, but there is still good visibility.”

Campsites in Yosemite Valley will be available for incoming campers beginning today. Because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Yosemite officials require day-use reservatio­ns to enter the park. For more informatio­n and to obtain a day use reservatio­n, go to recreation.gov.

Good news for campers: Park officials also are making more campground­s

available to the public. Until now, because of the coronaviru­s, only one major campground in Yosemite Valley, Upper Pines, was open, and at only 50% capacity. Starting today, however, Lower and North Pines campground­s also will reopen, with nearly all spaces open, a move that adds several hundred new spaces.

Mariposa County, where Yosemite Valley is located, is among the three counties in California with the lowest rates of COVID-19, along with Alpine and Modoc counties. Under state guidelines, it is in the yel

low tier, allowing for more business activity.

Hotels in the park will reopen Saturday.

Fire has not been burning inside Yosemite. But the Creek fire, burning between Yosemite and Kings Canyon national parks near Shaver Lake in rural Fresno County, has blackened 289,695 acres and sent smoke across the region. It was 32% contained Wednesday.

As a result of the fire, park officials had closed the Mariposa Grove. But that is expected to reopen in a few days, Gediman said.

The smoky conditions

that visitors and employees were experienci­ng last week were extreme. The air quality in Yosemite Valley on Sept. 17 afternoon measured a shockingly high 785 on the U. S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Air Quality Index scale. Anything over 150 is considered unhealthfu­l. The levels at El Portal and Tuolumne Meadows were 588 and 540, respective­ly.

By Wednesday afternoon, they had fallen to 55, according to an air monitor near the visitor center.

 ?? MARIO TAMA — GETTY IMAGES ?? Dusk falls over Half Dome and Nevada Fall as a visitor sits June 18 in Yosemite National Park. Yosemite National Park is reopening after being closed because of unhealthfu­l air quality levels caused by wildfire smoke.
MARIO TAMA — GETTY IMAGES Dusk falls over Half Dome and Nevada Fall as a visitor sits June 18 in Yosemite National Park. Yosemite National Park is reopening after being closed because of unhealthfu­l air quality levels caused by wildfire smoke.

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