Los Angeles Times

Tioga Road opens on the latest date ever

- By Cari Spencer

After a summer of standstill­s, some relief may finally be on the way for traffic-weary visitors to Yosemite National Park.

Tioga Road, a scenic route that provides access to the high country and also serves as the park’s eastern entry point, will open 8 a.m. Saturday after months of being smothered with snow and ice, according to the National Park Service.

It’s an unpreceden­tedly late reopening for the twolane road, which continues Highway 120 across the park and through the Sierra Nevada — meandering past granite cliffs and lush meadows.

Officials say some sections of the road will initially be reduced to a single lane, as repairs are still in progress.

Saturday will mark the latest recorded opening for Tioga Road, which typically closes for the winter in November and is usually back in service by June. The previous record was set 90 years ago — only about three decades after the first cars puttered through Yosemite Valley.

The lengthy closure extended drive times for locals and cut back the number of customers for local businesses.

Just off Tioga Road, the Mobil in Lee Vining has seen dramatical­ly fewer customers compared with past summers.

Estrella Romero, a cashier at the gas station, said about 500 customers would come through each day during most summers. This summer, it’s been down to 150.

The reopening was delayed by last winter’s historic snowfall, which at times shut down the park, campground­s and access roads, including Tioga Road — where even now some snow remains in sections as low as 8,000 feet. Park officials informed visitors of flooded meadows and trails in the area and urged visitors to plan for wet feet.

At the start of April, Tuolumne Meadows — which is directly accessible via Tioga Road — was blanketed under an average of 15 feet of snow. Crews last week uncovered major damage to at least 60% of the buildings in the area, including the Tuolumne Meadows Lodge and gift shop, as well as the wastewater treatment system that serves the area.

Visitors can use portable toilets, but many of the usual amenities won’t be available while repairs are made. The Tuolumne Meadows Wilderness Center and general informatio­n desk will be open, but park officials are urging visitors to stock up on food and water, as none will be available.

Those eager to camp off Tioga Road will also have to hold off for now. The Tamarack Flat and Porcupine Flat campground­s remain closed with no estimated reopening date. Other campground­s will stay closed all year, according to the National Park Service.

Although the area may not be back to normal just yet, reopening the road could provide much-needed relief from Yosemite’s recent congestion woes. Some access points have recently been so choked with traffic that visitors have had to wait hours to enter the park.

This is the first summer without a reservatio­n system at Yosemite since before the pandemic. And recent crowds have been so bad that some have begged for its return.

Traffic patterns aside, Tioga Road’s reopening is a relief for high country lovers eager for easy access to the subalpine meadows and blue lakes nestled between granite domes and towering lodgepole pines.

 ?? Beth Pratt ?? TIOGA ROAD, seen from Dana Plateau in August 2022, snakes past Ellery Lake in the Sierra Nevada. The road, which serves as the eastern entry to Yosemite National Park, typically is cleared of snow by June.
Beth Pratt TIOGA ROAD, seen from Dana Plateau in August 2022, snakes past Ellery Lake in the Sierra Nevada. The road, which serves as the eastern entry to Yosemite National Park, typically is cleared of snow by June.

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