Imperial Valley Press

Heart of Yosemite park to close as crews battle blaze

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER

LOS ANGELES — The heart of Yosemite National Park, where throngs of tourists are awe-struck by cascading waterfalls and towering granite features like El Capitan and Half Dome, will be closed as firefighte­rs try to corral a huge wildfire just to the west that has cast a smoky pall and threatened the park’s forest, officials said Tuesday.

Yosemite Valley will be closed for at least four days beginning at noon Wednesday, along with a winding, mountainou­s, 20mile stretch of State Route 41, park spokesman Scott Gediman said.

At least a thousand campground and hotel bookings will be canceled — to say nothing of the impact on day visitors, park workers and small businesses along the highway, Gediman said.

“We’re asking people here tonight to leave tomorrow morning,” he said. “And anyone that’s incoming tomorrow will get an email or phone call stating that their reservatio­n is canceled.”

The last time the 7.5-milelong valley was closed because of fire was 1990, he said.

Yosemite wasn’t under imminent danger from the Ferguson fire, officials were quick to point out. Authoritie­s decided on the closure to allow crews to perform protective measures like burning away brush along roadways without having to deal with traffic in the park that welcomes 4 million visitors annually.

Yosemite Valley is the centerpiec­e of the visitor experience, offering views of landmarks such as Half Dome, Sentinel Dome, Bridal Veil Fall, El Capitan and Yosemite Falls.

The glacial valley’s grand vista of waterfalls and shear granite faces has been obscured by a choking haze of smoke from a nearby fire.

Visitors are advised to “limit activity during the periods of poor air quality,” the park said in a statement.

“Some facilities and services are closed or diminished.”

Over nearly two weeks, flames have churned through more than 57 square miles of timber in steep terrain of the Sierra Nevada just west of the park.

The fire was 25 percent contained Tuesday morning.

Mandatory evacuation­s are in place in several communitie­s, while others have been told to get ready to leave if necessary.

More than 3,300 firefighte­rs are working the fire, aided by 16 helicopter­s. One firefighte­r was killed July 14, and six others have been injured.

Gediman suggested valley visitors divert to Tuolumne Meadows, on Yosemite’s northern edge, or to Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks to the south.

 ?? AP PHOTO/NOAH BERGER ?? In this July 15 file photo, a plane battling the Ferguson Fire passes the setting sun over unincorpor­ated Mariposa County, Calif., near Yosemite National Park. California authoritie­s will shut down Yosemite Valley for several days as crews try to stop...
AP PHOTO/NOAH BERGER In this July 15 file photo, a plane battling the Ferguson Fire passes the setting sun over unincorpor­ated Mariposa County, Calif., near Yosemite National Park. California authoritie­s will shut down Yosemite Valley for several days as crews try to stop...

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