Las Vegas Review-Journal

Crowded park: Zion sets visitor mark again

Web reservatio­n system pondered to ease traffic

- By Henry Brean Las Vegas Review-journal

People kept pouring into Zion National Park last year, even as officials there continued work on a plan aimed at controllin­g the crush.

The Utah park 160 miles northeast of Las Vegas set yet another attendance record in 2017 with more than 4.5 million visitors. That extends a streak of record-breaking years that began in 2014, when visitation at Zion topped 3 million for the first time.

The park service is now considerin­g a year-round online reservatio­n system for access to Zion’s most popular trails and attraction­s as part of a visitor-use management plan slated for completion late this year.

Though the park covers almost 147,000 acres, nearly all the visitation is concentrat­ed along the roughly five miles of road leading up the Virgin River and into Zion Canyon, where visitors sometimes face hourslong waits at the main entrance and long lines at restrooms, shuttle stops and even on hiking trails.

The park has just 1,200 parking spots for the more than 10,000 people who stop there on an average day.

Far from dead

Meanwhile, Death Valley National Park came within about 30 tour buses of setting an attendance record in 2017.

The park 100 miles west of Las Vegas counted just over 1.29 million visitors last year. That’s 1,456 people short of the official all-time mark set in 2016, when visitors flocked to Death Valley to experience a “super bloom” of wildflower­s and mark the 100th anniversar­y of the National Park Service.

Neither factor was in play last year, but Death Valley still saw its second-highest attendance on record.

Superinten­dent Mike Reynolds isn’t surprised.

“You can spend a lifetime here

and not see everything,” he said in a written statement. “The scenery is vast and inspiring.”

At 3.4 million acres, Death Valley is the largest national park in the lower 48 states. Most of the park is located in California, but two small portions extend into Nevada’s Nye and Esmeralda counties.

The park service uses a formula to determine visitor volume at the park based on data from traffic counters on major roads leading into Death Valley, informatio­n from hotel operators and passenger counts from the air strip at Furnace Creek.

2016 broke records

Death Valley attracted just 9,970 visitors in 1933, the year it was designated a national monument.

Among national parks in the region, Death Valley, Zion, Joshua Tree, Grand Canyon and Great Basin all saw unpreceden­ted traffic in 2016, helping the park service to a systemwide record of almost 331 million visitors during its centennial year.

Lake Mead National Recreation Area fell short of its visitation record in 2016 but still attracted 7.2 million people, good for seventh on the list of the nation’s busiest park sites.

The park service has not yet released its complete visitor statistics for 2017.

Lake Mead officials hope to have their numbers from last year finalized this week. The figures for the park service as a whole should come out later this month.

Contact Henry Brean at hbrean@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0350. Follow @Refriedbre­an on Twitter.

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 ?? Brian Farner ?? Hikers line up on the Angels Landing Trail at Zion National Park on May 28. More than 4.5 million people visited the Utah park in 2017.
Brian Farner Hikers line up on the Angels Landing Trail at Zion National Park on May 28. More than 4.5 million people visited the Utah park in 2017.

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