The Mercury News

Mariposa Grove reopens after repairs.

January’s raging storm caused at least $3M in damages to facilities at landmark

- By Paul Rogers progers@bayareanew­sgroup. com

Mariposa Grove, a landmark of Yosemite National Park first set aside for protection by Abraham Lincoln in 1864 and visited by millions of people since then, reopened to the public Wednesday, more than three months after a raging storm with 100 mph winds toppled giant sequoia trees, felled dozens of others and wrecked facilities.

The storm on Jan. 18-19 caused an estimated $3 million to $4 million in damage, sending trees crashing into the area’s main restroom and destroying new wooden boardwalks, fencing and trails at the grove, where giant sequoias dating back 2,000 years tower up to 285 feet high.

“There are still trees down,” said Yosemite spokesman Scott Gediman. “But overall, it’s as beautiful as ever.”

In all, 15 giant sequoias out of roughly 500 at Mariposa Grove fell, although none of the most famous named trees died in the storm. The boardwalks, trails and restrooms in the area have not yet been repaired. Those facilities were recently built as part of a $40 million restoratio­n project in Mariposa Grove that reopened to the public just three years ago.

Shuttle buses that normally bring visitors to the grove will not run this year because the park has had to set up portable restrooms and doesn’t want to encourage large crowds. Until the facilities are repaired next year, visitors will have to walk or bicycle 2 miles each way and bring their own water.

It’s an additional 1.5mile round-trip hike to the grove’s most famous features, the Grizzly Giant and California Tunnel Tree.

The Mariposa Grove Welcome Plaza, which is near Yosemite’s south entrance, will have flushable toilets and drinking water. The Mariposa Grove Arrival Area will have portable toi

lets and no drinking water.

The fallen giant sequoias will not be cut up for firewood or any other use, park officials said. Instead, trails will be rerouted around them.

“A fallen tree is part of nature,” Gediman said. “Fallen trees provide habitat for animals. Their seeds can help new trees grow. It’s part of the natural process.”

The cost to repair everything is estimated at between $3 million and $4 million, said Frank Dean, CEO of the Yosemite Conservanc­y, a San Franciscob­ased nonprofit group that helps raise funds for park projects and that paid for half of the previous $40 million effort. Work will begin later this year and should be finished by this time next year, he said.

“Nature bats last, as they say,” said Dean, a former Yosemite

ranger. “But we are going to get it fixed.”

Dean noted that photograph­s and paintings of the massive, ancient trees — at least as much, if not more than images of Yosemite Valley — helped persuade Lincoln and other 19thcentur­y leaders to save the park. There were glacially carved valleys in Switzerlan­d and other places, he said. But no one in government on the East Coast had ever seen trees like the famed sequoias, cousins of California’s coast redwoods.

“The grove is very important from a conservati­on standpoint,” Dean said. “It was the first active conservati­on on that scale by government anywhere in the world.”

The wind storm that toppled the trees was an event for the record books.

On Jan. 18, it raged out of the east, tearing through the Central Sierra Nevada. The winds, known as Mono winds because they can originate near

Mono Lake on the California-Nevada border, periodical­ly rush over the Sierra’s granite ridges, causing significan­t damage similar to Santa Ana winds in Southern California. The National Weather Service reported gusts from the storm reached 110 mph at Cascadel Heights, about 20 miles south of Yosemite’s southern boundary near Oakhurst.

Eight giant sequoias fell in the upper part of Mariposa Grove and seven fell in the lower grove. Gediman said he is unaware of any storm in the park’s 156-year history having knocked down so many of the ancient giants.

“Rockfalls, fires, floods and wind events alter the landscape at Yosemite,” he said. “It’s a part of the Yosemite story. It’s disappoint­ing to see the damage, but it’s part of the ever-changing landscape of the park.”

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 ?? YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK ?? A storm with winds up to 100 mph toppled trees Jan. 18-19 in Mariposa Grove, Yosemite National Park, including firs, pines and 15 giant sequoias.
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK A storm with winds up to 100 mph toppled trees Jan. 18-19 in Mariposa Grove, Yosemite National Park, including firs, pines and 15 giant sequoias.

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