Suburbia in our National Park Campgrounds

Mesquite Sand Dunes

Is suburbia really what we want for our national park campgrounds? The “Made in America” Outdoor Recreation Advisory Committee thinks so. Recommendations in their final report to the Department of the Interior call for “improvements” such as food trucks, Amazon deliveries and glamping.

I know that there are plenty of NPS campgrounds that are already practically suburbia. Campers are packed into tiny spaces like travelers flying economy, with no room to stretch their legs and no privacy.  I’ve endured those campsites a time or two. A food truck probably wouldn’t make much difference in some of those places. There’s nothing wild left anyway.

Joshua Tree National Park Campground
Camping in Joshua Tree

But there are others – secluded “primitive” campgrounds where your neighbor is not breathing down your neck. Campgrounds where you can hear owls hoot or coyotes sing, and can still see the stars instead of the lights from your neighbor’s RV. I’ve stayed in some of those campgrounds, too, and loved them.

That is what has me so worried. This report targets those poor, primitive national park campgrounds that are so very, very far away from gateway communities. Campgrounds that can still give a visitor an experience they won’t find at home. It says right in the document  “especially in park units with low levels of visitor services that now limit public use.”

Save our national park campgrounds!
Split Rock Campground Dinosaur National Monument

It’s all a roundabout way of selling off our public lands to the highest bidder. No one could say that this committee was fair and unbiased, or that it did not have a very obvious agenda – the great god profit. Just look at who the people on this committee are and who they represent.

Goodell Creek Campground
Camping in North Cascades

The Committee

  • Bill Yeargin, President and CEO, Correct Craft – They make motorboats.
  • Derrick Crandall, President of the American Recreation Coalition – This is a Washington lobbying group promoting the interests of the motorized recreation industry – snowmobile manufacturers, boat & engine dealers, the motorcycle industry and RV parks and campgrounds are some of their clients.
  • Ben Bulis, President and CEO, American Fly Fishing Trade Association – they make fishing gear.
  • Bruce Fears, President, ARAMARK Harrison Lodging – Park concessionaires.
  • Brad Franklin, Government Relations Manager, Yamaha Motor Corporation USA – they make motorcycles and ATVs.
  • Antonio Gonzalez, Head of Operations, Erwin Hymer Group North America – a camper van manufacturer that went into receivership in July due to “certain financial irregularities” .
  • Jeremy Jacobs, Co-CEO, Delaware North – another park concessionaire
  • Chris Maloof, Former Senior Vice President, Product Management,  Rogue Wave – Listed as a representative of camping, recreational and/or all-terrain vehicles interests on the committee.
  • Phil Morlock, Vice President, Government Affairs and Advocacy, Shimano North America Holding, Inc./Shimano Canada Ltd. – They make bike and fishing gear.
  • John Morris, Founder and CEO, Bass Pro Shops – Outdoor retailer
  • Patrick Pacious, President and CEO, Choice Hotels International, Inc. – Hotel business
  • Jim Rogers, Former Chairman and CEO, KOA (Kampgrounds of America) – These guys are the kings of RV campgrounds. They are the largest privately owned campground business in the world.
  • K.C. Walsh, Executive Chairman and majority owner, Simms Fishing Products – They make fishing gear.
  • Linda Craghead, Director, Facilities Division, Kansas State University – Ms. Craghead is the token committee member who does NOT represent a private business. In her former roles with the Kansas State Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism, she earned a reputation as an exceptional marketer for the state’s parks and tourism opportunities.

    Olympic National Park
    Kalaloch Campground, Olympic National Park

Who is NOT on the committee

This is not a balanced roster. Many important stakeholder groups have no voice. Some of these stakeholders include non-profit organizations already involved in service projects for the parks, whose members are frequent visitors to national park campgrounds, from the Boy Scouts to the Sierra Club. It does not include in its long list of outdoor recreation manufacturers any of the businesses who service a clientele endeavoring to leave a lighter footprint on the land, such as REI or the Outdoor Industry Association This committee is a gang of good old boys and motorheads pushing their personal agendas, and our parks could be the losers.

The “studies” quoted as the source for their consensus on modernization were actually conducted by KOA. This is not exactly a fair and unbiased source. In fact, it represents a conflict of interest.

Arches National Park campground
Camping at sunset in Arches

Undermining the National Environmental Policy Act

Usually, when a national park proposes to undertake a major project, such as building a new campground or substantially changing an existing one, they have to give the public time to weigh in. They hold meetings locally. They open the project to public comment so that all stakeholders have a voice.

Every national park is unique, and so is every campground location. What works in one park may be all wrong for another.

The committee would like to subvert this process. Recommendation #3 states “Multiple operational models for campgrounds can be identified and communicated to park units, along with information that would expedite any NEPA-related reviews. Key to this would be “categorical permissions,” covering key campground components …”

Redwood National Park
Redwood National Park

On the Fast Track

They’ve also put these projects on the fast track. Their document states “The lessons learned with near-immediate operational changes in national parks can be then replicated for other Interior bureaus …”

How near-immediate? Recommendation #2 – “A Secretarial challenge can be established and implemented by December 1st, 2019. “That’s pretty damn near immediate.

Food trucks are only the beginning. In last year’s letter to the Secretary of the Interior, the committee strongly urged a more open attitude towards motorized vehicles and drones, without even a nod to the possible infringement on other visitors’ right to privacy or a natural soundscape. They don’t seem to realize that people go to national parks to commune with nature, not their neighbors or their neighbors’ toys.

Island in the Sky
Canyonlands National Park

Any good suggestions?

I don’t disagree with all of the committee’s conclusions. More group campground sites for extended family groups? That’s an excellent idea and will help the NPS build a more diverse audience. Showers in the campgrounds? I enjoy this in some state parks I’ve visited. In a few locations it would be a great idea. However, many of our National Parks in the arid West really don’t have the water to spare and should be teaching people to conserve, not consume, scarce resources.

Another recommendation by the committee leaves me with mixed feelings. They propose blackout periods at peak times for seniors taking advantage of the half-price camping offered with their Golden Age passes.

Camping in Olympic National Park
Sol Duc Campground, Olympic National Park

I understand that this makes economic sense. But blackout periods for seniors and raising campground prices for “improvements”, that many campers would prefer to do without, marginalizes people with lower incomes, including many seniors.

Personally, it kind of chaps my hide, because I become eligible for half-price camping in two weeks. I’ve been looking forward to it, and as soon as I can get it, they want to take it away. Guess I’m a day late and a dollar short as usual…

Organ Pipe National Monument
Camping at Organ Pipe

What does the NPS think?

What does the NPS think of this report? No word yet. But there are guiding statements that should influence the Park Service point of view. One of the strategic goals listed as an NPS priority in the NPS Deferred Maintenance 101 presentation is “eliminate non-essential development in parks in order to emphasize the parks’ natural and cultural significance.”

And of course there’s that statement the whole NPS mission is built on, the founding statement in the 1916 Organic Act – “to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations”.

I sincerely hope the National Park Service will keep its mandate in mind when they consider the suggestions made by this blatantly special interest dominated advisory committee.

Olympic National Park has some wonderful campgrounds.
Mora Campground, Olympic National Park

My Favorite Blogs

Mt. Donaho & Stairway Icefall

Where does a rambling ranger find the fun facts she shares with others? Many places, actually. I talk to other rangers and volunteers at Visitor and Interpretive Centers I come across in my travels. I read brochures other handouts I find in these same places. I check out websites. I do a lot of research. And sometimes, I read other blogs.

If you like reading my articles, here are a few other blogs you might enjoy.

pronghorn antelope
Cool Green Science will teach you a lot about wildlife.

Cool Green Science

This is the official blog for The Nature Conservancy. It’s definitely my favorite blog. It’s what I aspire to. Every week I can’t wait to see what Matt Miller, one of their main writers, has to say.  Not only do I learn something new, but there’s usually a great call to action showing how you can help make the world a better place, or an uplifting message of something going right for a change. Reading this blog can make my day sometimes.

Coffee and Woodsmoke

This is a woman after my own heart. This is the blog I would write if I were more rooted. Based in Montana, Coffee and Woodsmoke extols the joys of living that Northern/Western, rural,  close to the land lifestyle. And what’s more, she includes a recipe with every blogpost. I can’t wait to try the Chai-Spiced Turmeric Latte!

 

Baby elephant seal
Hakai Magazine has superb articles about coastal science and culture.

Hakai Magazine

I guess technically this isn’t a blog, it’s an online magazine, but they send a newsletter to my inbox so it FEELS like a blog. I am SO impressed with this Vancouver Island based publication on coastal science and culture. Fabulous photography and superb writing. Extremely informative.

Wediditourway.com

This Canadian couple took the money they had been saving for a house and decided to travel the world instead. Their article on “15 Things to do in Armenia that are not in Churches” added Armenia to my bucket list. They also write posts helpful to the armchair reader who wants to start living the gypsy lifestyle but isn’t sure how.

Elk
Rocky Mountain National Park

Park Advocate

This is the official blog for the National Parks Conservation Association, the non-profit organization that watchdogs and advocates for our national parks. It’s a good place to keep up on what’s happening in our  parks, learn about places you may not have heard of, and see some really pretty pictures, too.

I hope you enjoy these blogs as much as I have. Do you have a favorite blog you’d like to share with us? Leave your suggestions in the comments!

 

Marvelous Moab

La Sal Mountains

I used to hang out around Moab a lot, BMB (before mountain biking). From the mid-eighties through the nineties, I would spend a month every spring hiking on the Colorado Plateau.

Scenic Byway Highway 269
Potash Road

It was just a cow town then, a place to get gas and groceries. We would camp for free along the river, on the River Road, Kane Creek and the Potash Road. In Arches, we’d get up before dawn to get a jump on the masses and have the most popular trails to ourselves. If we felt like sleeping in, we’d find more obscure routes to follow. After all, it’s not wilderness if you can’t find solitude. Once, we spent three weeks straight trippin’ in the Needles District of Canyonlands, seeing ice cream flavors in the colors of the slickrock – fudge swirl and neapolitan.

Arches National Park
Alpenglow on Skyline Arch

It was a free life, both in cost and the freedom to do what you wanted whenever and wherever you wanted.

Things changed. Moab was discovered. It got crowded. We still came to the Colorado Plateau every spring, but we passed through Moab and didn’t linger on our way to points further south. Just gas and groceries.

It’s the first time I’ve been back in quite a while. The old cow town now smacks of the overkill typical of National Park gateways, reminiscent of Estes Park, Glitter Gulch outside of Denali, West Yellowstone.

New Construction in Moab
Changes

New construction is happening everywhere. The Rock Shop used to be WAY on the outskirts of town, but now it’s motel after motel all the way past the river on Hwy. 191. There’s even a tram and a zip line.

It’s been years since you could camp free on the river. Designated fee campgrounds are the way to go now. You can no longer spend three weeks lost in the backcountry of Canyonlands. There’s a two week maximum limit, a $30 fee, permits to be acquired, designated backcountry campsites. And Arches? Ed Abbey would roll over in his grave. Talk about being loved to death.

Arches National Park
Sunset in Arches

I understand. We need to manage the impact on this fragile environment. Rightly so, there’s a lot of impact. Still, I cherish the time I had here when it WAS free, a little known secret paradise.

Of course, it’s mountain bike Mecca now. I don’t mountain bike, so if you want to know more about the Moab biking trails, check out this article on GoNomad. It’s also a hotspot for four-wheeling, with all the old uranium mining roads, rafting, and rock climbing. The hiking is still great. In addition to the national parks, there are the Behind the Rocks, Mill Creek and Negro Bill WSAs among others. The dining options and the nightlife are a lot better than they used to be, I’ll give it that!

Potash Road
Check out the petroglyphs and rock climbing on Highway 279

I have no desire to be here in the peak season of spring anymore, when the crowds are insane, but it’s winter now. Off season, no crowds. I can love this place once again, and I’ve found some deals.

Due to Park Service budget cuts, the visitor center, and the entrance booth, at Island in the Sky in Canyonlands are closed in January and February. There’s nowhere to pay your fee, so the park is free for a little while. Quite a change from the proposed $70 per vehicle fee (up from $30) that may be charged beginning in June.

Kit fox at Island in the Sky, Canyonlands
kit fox napping

Although there are always a lot of visitors in Arches, even in winter, you won’t find any problems with getting a parking space, even at the most popular viewpoints and trailheads. And then there’s still the Potash Road. I may have to do an entire blog on that one. I fell in love with it all over again.

One of the best wintertime deals, though, is lodging at the Lazy Lizard Hostel. It’s cold outside. I don’t really want to camp in the cold. I need a place to stay.

Lazy Lizard Hostel, Moab, UT
Lazy Lizard Hostel

The Lazy Lizard is a great deal year-round, with $12 bunks in the dorms. However, I find in my old age that I’m no longer comfortable sharing my sleeping space with half a dozen other people. The real deal at the Lazy Lizard in winter is private rooms and cabins. You can get a private room or cabin during December, January and February for only $22 a night!

That’s cheaper than rent in Denver. You get privacy, Wi-Fi, kitchen privileges, heat …and good company. There’s a great mellow vibe to this place. I find myself continually coming back. It’s allowed me to fall in love with Moab all over again. So if you’re passing through Moab in the winter, give the Lazy Lizard a try. It may become one of your new favorite places!

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Five Favorite Posts

The view from my front porch

Well, it’s official. Ramblingranger is one year old today. To celebrate, I’m doing a roundup of the five favorite posts over the last year.

Sedona – Sucked into the Vortex 

This is the most recent post. It’s also the one that’s gotten the most “likes” from the blogging world.

Cathedral Rocks is a vortex spot.
Desert Reflections

https://www.ramblingranger.com/sedona-sucked-into-the-vortex/

 This Road is #1 

As I traveled the Coast Highway last year after California’s record rains, I was amazed by both the beauty and the engineering of this spectacular road.

A few miles south of the Lost Coast

https://www.ramblingranger.com/this-road-is-1/

The Loneliest Day 

Got lots of good feedback on this post – and it was so much fun to write!

Simpson, Hotel Duncan, Arizona

https://www.ramblingranger.com/the-loneliest-day/

There’s Nothing Like A Pronghorn!

I love the photos, and the message. Gotta advocate for wildlife and give them a voice! https://www.ramblingranger.com/theres-nothing-like-a-pronghorn/

Fun, Full of Flavor, and Free!

I had fun with this, as I had never done any kind of business review before. I hope to do a lot more as time goes on.

Saturday tastings at Spero's are fun and free!
Saturday tastings at Spero’s are fun and free!

https://www.ramblingranger.com/fun-full-of-flavor-free-spero-winery/

I hope you’ve enjoyed sharing my thoughts and travels over the past year. Stay tuned for more adventures with the ramblingranger coming soon!

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Sedona – Sucked Into The Vortex

Cathedral Rocks is a vortex spot.

 

I didn’t expect to like this place so much.

I had a bad first impression. I was driving through on my way to Death Valley. I didn’t have a lot of time, but I had an hour or two to check it out, see if it was worth coming back to. My sister loved it, said it was the best place for a family vacation ever, better than Disneyland. Other friends spoke of it in reverent tones. I had high hopes.

Fay Canyon
Wine Glass for a Giant

I traveled down beautiful Oak Creek Canyon. I pulled into a Forest Service parking lot and pulled out my America The Beautiful Pass. This is supposed to be good for all federal public lands, I thought. Not so. My pass was no good here. I wasn’t willing to spend an additional $5 or $7 when I only had an hour to spend, so I went on to Sedona.

The crazy congested confusion of uptown Sedona really freaked me out. Too busy for me! I don’t need this pretentious, expensive, New-Agey town! I spent my spare hour and a half on THAT road trip in Jerome.

But when a listing came up for a housesitting gig in Sedona this fall, I thought I’d give it a second chance. I’m glad I did.

Western Bluebirds
Here a bird, there a bird, everywhere a bird, bird

The Trails

Sedona has the best urban trail system anywhere. There’s so much green space. Big red rocks everywhere. Wherever you are, you’re only minutes away from another incredible rock formation.

And birds. The bird watching is phenomenal here. Everywhere I went – riparian areas, upland forest, desert red rock – there were lots and lots of birds, even in places you wouldn’t expect them.

Fay Canyon
Crazy Manzanita Tree of Life living sculpture

And the trees. I’ve generally lived in landscapes with a minimum of variety when it comes to trees. If you can learn five species, you’ve pretty much got it covered. Not here.

I fell in love with two new trees. There were the sycamores along the streams. I’d seen a few last year in my travels through southern Arizona, but I really got to know them this time around. My favorite new tree was the Arizona Cypress. The foliage is somewhat like a Juniper, but the bark is something else, shedding in strips and smooth underneath, mottled grey and red. I just had to pet them.

Boynton Canyon Vista
View from a Vortex

They make a big deal about the vortexes here – supposedly places where the Earth’s energy rises up and is accessible, power places. I visited three of the four vortex spots, but they weren’t necessarily MY favorite hikes.

One of my favorite trails was Buddha Beach, renamed the Baldwin Trail. It takes you to Oak Creek with wonderful views of Cathedral Rock. Another was Soldier Pass. You pass by a big sinkhole, Devil’s Kitchen, then up to the Seven Sacred Pools, (they’re tiny), through an Arizona Cypress forest to a couple of arches. Great way to spend a day.

Oak Creek and Cathedral Rocks
Buddha Beach

Shopping

 Yes, it is pretentious. I went to First Friday to check out the galleries, and I thought most of them were overpriced for what they had to offer. I’ve worked art galleries and used to be a co-owner of an art co-op, so I know what I’m talking about. But there are exceptions. The Turquoise Tortoise had good stuff at fairly reasonable prices – for an art gallery, that is.

Tlaquepaque Sedona AZ
Sedona is a great place to go browsing in the shops.

There was one gallery that really impressed me. It was the finest art gallery I have ever seen. It’s called Exposures. Yes, you could buy a small house for the price of some of these pieces, but they’re actually worth it. If I were a rock star I’d shop here.

The wind sculptures swirling out in front are what first caught my eye. When you enter the building, be prepared to be blown away. I can’t even describe some of the amazing pieces I saw. They’re, well, ART, plain and simple. A lot of mixed media, abstract, amazing and hard to describe. One artist combines oil painting with crystals. I don’t mean one or two crystals, but whole rafts of them, major mineral specimens making up the shoreline of an ocean sunset, for example. Breathtaking. Another artist creates whimsical sculptures by mixing hand blown glass and metalworking. I’ve never seen so much sheer creativity in one place before.

Natural Wonders Gift Shop Sedona AZ
I really liked Lowell’s shop, Natural Wonders

There are other cool shops mixed in with the art galleries. There’s wonderful hand crafted clothing, neat rock shops, and more. I don’t usually spend much time shopping, but it was fun to check that scene out.

Then there are all the New Age shops. I didn’t have time to look into it, but if you ever want a past life reading this would be the place to get it – or have your aura photographed, or buy magical crystals… you get the idea.

My two week housesit wasn’t enough. I came back and spent another week, then a few more days, then… I know I’ll be back. It seems that I, like many another Sedona visitor, can’t get enough. I’ve been sucked into the vortex.

Sedona, AZ
Alpenglow on Red Rock

China Date Ranch

Enjoy a date shake at the China Date Ranch!

When you’re in the Death Valley / Las Vegas area, be sure to visit the China Date Ranch near Tecopa. You won’t regret it!

When I first came to Death Valley, I spent my first night in the area at Tecopa Hot Springs, and everyone there told me the date ranch was a place to be. I didn’t listen. Date shakes? Weird… It didn’t sound that special. It took me a year before I bothered to check it out. I had NO idea what I was missing.

China Date Ranch
This is a working date farm.

This is a working date farm, but the China Date Ranch is so much more! It’s a date plantation, a historical site, a gift shop, a nature preserve. Lush, green, filled with hummingbirds in one of the driest landscapes on the planet, this tiny pocket oasis holds a plethora of possibilities.

In addition to their famous shakes and about a dozen different varieties of dates to try, China Date Ranch also makes delicious cookies, muffins and date bread.

It’s not ALL about dates. China Date Ranch also sells local honey and a host of gourmet food items – jams, jellies, hot sauces, dips.

Food is just the beginning of what they have to offer. The gift shop holds one of the most eclectic inventories you’ll find anywhere. From simply splendid mineral specimens to beautiful handmade jewelry, baskets to coffee cups – antiques, imports, curios – take the time to peruse the jumbled shelves and corners and find a treasure in this odd little boutique.

Walk outside and sit at a shaded table to enjoy your shake, surrounded by a marvelous cactus garden. This is a wonderful bird watching spot. Coveys of quail hustle from bush to bush.

Anna's Hummingbird
Great birdwatching at China Date Ranch

Hummingbird feeders attract the little feathered jewels year round, and shade and water in the desert can lead to other unusual bird sightings. Watch for a splash of orange up in the palm fronds, and you may catch a glimpse of an oriole, even in winter!

Take a walk around the grounds. There is a tiny museum on the premises for you history buffs. If you like to hike, China Date Ranch is the gateway to a wonderful trail system maintained by the Amargosa Nature Conservancy. One trail takes you down to the Amargosa River, where you may find footprints left by a kit fox or catch a glimpse of rare pupfish. There are slot canyons to explore and windows and hoodoos to photograph. Walk along the bed of the defunct Tonapah to Tidewater Railway and visit the remains of old borax mining sites.

Hike thewonderful trail system managed by the Amargosa Nature Conservancy
Amargosa River

You might like the China Date Ranch so much that you’re reluctant to leave. Perhaps one day is not enough. Well, there is a way to stay, and it’s as unusual as everything else at China Date Ranch. Cynthia’s provides luxury teepee accommodations right in the valley.

After a full day of hiking and fun, you can ease those tired muscles in the hot springs just a few short miles away. I’ll tell you more about that in another post sometime…..