South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

No reservatio­n, no problem for Yosemite visitors

- By Christophe­r Reynolds and Mary Forgione

YosemiteNa­tional Park will reopen to drive-up traffic onNov. 1, dropping the day-use reservatio­n system that has limited access since June.

That system, which capped bookings through recreation.gov at about

1,700 passes per day, aimed to reduce the risk of

COVID-19 transmissi­on. Most days have been sold outwell in advance.

“It’s been maxed every day,” spokesman Scott Gediman said lastweek.

Because the number of visitors declines in fall, Gediman said,“We feel that the numbers thatwe’re going to see starting in November are going to be manageable.”

StartingNo­v. 1, he said, visitors can “pay your $35 and go right on in.” The admission fee allows visitors access for seven days.

Lastweek’s announceme­nt follows crises that closed the park twice in the last seven months. The park closedMarc­h 20-June 11 because of the coronaviru­s pandemic; most of its campground­s remained closed through the summer.

The entire park closed again Sept. 17-24 because of smoky air fromthe nearby Creek fire in SierraNati­onal Forest.

Most park features and operations have reopened, including Glacier Point, TuolumneMe­adows and the AhwahneeHo­tel. The notable exception: The MariposaGr­ove area remains closed.

In the first seven months of this year, National Park Service statistics show, Yosemite counted 1.05 million visitors, down from

2.39 million the year before. Mariposa County, which includes Yosemite Valley, has reported 75 cases of

COVID-19, with two fatalities, since April 28.

Meanwhile, wildfires continue to burn throughout the state, forcing closures of many parks.

 ?? AMANDA LEE MYERS/AP ?? A couple is married atop Taft Point in 2018 in California’s Yosemite National Park.
AMANDA LEE MYERS/AP A couple is married atop Taft Point in 2018 in California’s Yosemite National Park.

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