The Grand Canyon wants travelers to stop leaving so-called “love locks” on fencing in the park, warning the trend endangers animals.
29.09.2023 - 23:03 / forbes.com
Peak fall foliage is popping in Estes Park, the mountain town just outside of Colorado’s Rocky Mountain National Park. Soon, the elk will be bugling as part of their annual mating ritual, a wildlife spectacle that draws tourists to the mountain town for “Elktober.” Down in southern Colorado, the “ring of fire eclipse” is projected to pass directly through Mesa Verde National Park on Oct. 14, drawing tourists eager to catch the rare celestial event among the Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings.
Suffice it to say, the looming 2023 government shutdown could be a big blow to the state’s tourism economy, which is why Colorado Gov. Jared Polis is the latest vowing to keep national parks running should federal government operations grind to a halt next week. He joins leaders in Utah and Arizona this week, who have been coming up with creative workarounds and pledging to keep the parks open amid a likely government shutdown.
In Colorado, Polis signed an executive order directing the Colorado Department of Natural Resources and Colorado Parks and Wildlife to come up with a plan to keep the state’s parks open.
Next door, in Utah, Gov. Spencer Cox and the Utah Office of Tourism will keep Utah’s Mighty 5 national parks — Bryce, Zion, Capitol Reef, Arches, and Canyonlands — running with $5 million in earmarked funds that will be distributed to foundations affiliated with the national parks.
The foundations won’t run the parks, but they’ll transfer the state funds to parks to underwrite basic operations, like staffing visitor centers, picking up trash, cleaning the bathrooms, and, potentially, keeping the shuttles running in Zion and Bryce Canyon national parks.
In Arizona, home to the Grand Canyon, Governor Katie Hobbs says Arizona Lottery dollars will keep its parks in operation.
In these Western states, keeping the parks open comes down to simple economics. According to a 2022 National Park Service Visitor Spending Effects Report, visitor spending in Utah’s national park pumps $2.6 billion into the state’s economy.
“Our first priority is watching out for visitors who have traveled from all over the world to have once-in-a-lifetime experiences,” Vicki Varela, managing director of the Utah Office of Tourism, said in a statement. “We are also mindful of communities that rely on the visitor economy, and of course, protecting the natural environment of these beautiful places.”
If Congress remains in a gridlock and lawmakers don’t pass annual spending bills that fund government agencies like the Department of Interior that oversees the national parks, then it will trigger a government shutdown.
Lawmakers have until 12:01 a.m. on Oct. 1 to reach a deal, but already the Department of Interior proactively issued a notice
The Grand Canyon wants travelers to stop leaving so-called “love locks” on fencing in the park, warning the trend endangers animals.
Skygazers in eight western U.S. states will be treated to a rare “ring of fire” eclipse on Saturday, Oct. 14. With the moon covering all but the outer edges of the sun, it will briefly look as though there’s a blazing ring of fire igniting the sky.
The Grand Canyon sees around 5 million visitors a year for good reason: its grandeur is unlike any other place in the world. However, just a few hours away, there is another “canyon” national park that is smaller, much less trafficked, more colorful, and surrounded by distinct natural wonders. Bryce Canyon Country includes Bryce Canyon National Park, Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, Capitol Reef National Park, Kodachrome State Park, and so much more in its 3-million-plus acres of protected lands. It’s the perfect Grand Canyon alternative for anyone who wants to see Utah’s natural splendor without the same level of crowds — Bryce Canyon sees about 2.5 million annual visitors, Capitol Reef about 1.5 million, and not even one million visit Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument every year.
Imagine waking up to gorgeous lake views surrounded by misty mountains and trees lining the horizon as far as the eye can see. That’s the magic of Jasper National Park, the largest national park in the Canadian Rockies, where I recently spent a cozy retreat to welcome the fall season. Coming from the scorching heat of Phoenix, Arizona, my lungs craved the crisp morning air, while the desert girl in me relished and autumnal mountain hues — and I soaked it all in from the private balcony of an alpine lodge on the shores of Pyramid Lake.
This Saturday, October 14, a solar eclipse will be seen across the Americas. From inside a 125 miles wide path stretching across the U.S. Southwest and on to Central and South America, a “ring of fire” will be glimpsed for a few minutes as a smaller-looking new moon covers only the middle 90% of the sun.
Turn around, bright eyes. Come mid-October, a major celestial event will be viewable from major swaths of the Western Hemisphere. Or maybe just look up – with the proper eye protection, that is.
From the deserts of Arizona to the rocky coastline of Maine, from the sandy shores of Florida to the peaks of Colorado, the United States offers a breathtaking range of natural landscapes. The new National Geographic book Great Outdoors USA: 1,000 Adventures Across All 50 States reveals how to hike, raft, climb, surf, and bike through some of the best of them. Here are 50 of its top picks, one in each state.
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Entrances to national parks will be blocked and thousands of park rangers will be furloughed if Congress doesn't reach a budget agreement this weekend, the Department of Interior said Friday.
The “ring of fire” annular solar eclipse will, for most people in the U.S., be merely a partial solar eclipse. Only if you get into the 125 miles wide path that stretches from Oregon through Texas will you see the “ring of fire”—and only then for just a few minutes.
Most U.S. National Parks will shut down their operations if U.S. lawmakers don’t reach a deal to fund the federal government by Saturday night, the Department of Interior said Friday in a press release.