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Category: National Park Service

10 April 2017

How to celebrate National Park Week

Make a plan for National Park Week while saving money, getting healthier, and celebrating Earth Day.  What more could you ask for?  Once again the National Park Service is partnering with the National Park Foundation to present National Park Week from April 15 to 23, 2017.  You have 417 national park sites to choose from and each one has a story to tell.    From diverse wildlife and iconic landscapes, to vibrant culture and rich history, our National Park System has something for everyone.

inversion Brahma & Zoroaster temples North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaAs a Park Ranger I frequently help people plan their visit to the Grand Canyon.  That’s part of my job, but, I highly recommend doing some research before ever leaving home.

National Park Service park sites mapPlan your visit

Every good journey starts with a plan whether it’s life or travel.  Time to pull out a map and figure out how long you want to drive. Either near or far there is most likely a national park site to visit for free.  The National Park Service offers an interactive map to help you discover park sites across the country.  Visit park’s websites to discover what to do and see.  Need a place to overnight?  Lodging in national parks often require reservations months in advance.  But sometimes people cancel so be persistent.  Keep an eye on the weather which can change suddenly in nature and pack accordingly.  High elevation areas may still be closed for the winter.  Arrive early in the day because you won’t be alone with others wanting a similar experience.  Know before you go.

Gaelyn Senior pass water fill station Point Supreme Cedar Breaks National Monument UtahI bought my Senior Pass at Cedar Breaks National Monument Utah

Save money

The 118 National Park Service sites that normally charge entrance fees will offer free admission on the weekends of April 15, 16, 22, and 23 during National Park Week.  2017 also has 10 fee free days to visit your national parks.  And if you’re over 62, buy your Senior Park Pass before the price goes up Oct 1st from $10 to $80 for the rest of your life.  If you’re younger than that think about buying the annual America the Beautiful Park Pass for $80.  Entrance visiting three to four large parks in one year can cost more than that.  There is also a free Access pass for disabilities, a free annual US military pass, and a free annual 4th grade pass through the Every Kid in a Park program.

visitor center North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaStop at the Visitor Center

Have questions even after your research?  Park Rangers in the visitor center are happy to help.  Let them know how long you’ll visit and what activities you seek.  The visitor center displays often answer questions too.  Plus they provide valuable information to make your visit more pleasant and informed.  Check the posted Ranger programs.  Maybe take a phone photo for later reference.  Pick up a Junior Ranger book.

Junior Ranger badges in RVBecome a Junior Ranger

National Junior Ranger Day on April 15th kicks off National Park Week.  Become a Junior Ranger and learn while you earn a park-specific Junior Ranger badge.  Ask about a “Not so Junior Ranger” program that some parks offer.  Besides, you’re never too old to learn.  I currently have 30 Junior Ranger badges that I earned completing all the activities in the books and I always learn something while having fun.  As a summer Park Ranger I see kids and adults learning and earning badges all the time.

trailsGet healthy

Taking a walk in nature is known to be good for both your physical and mental health.  Supported by increasing scientific evidence, many medical doctors now write prescriptions for the outdoors as an antidote for ailments such as diabetes, high blood pressure, and depression.  On April 23, the second annual Park Prescription Day, will be filled with activities that showcase the physical, mental, and psychological health benefits of time in nature.  Ask about “healthy hiker”.  I earned a pin for hiking at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.

Cartoon Ranger telling animals not to feed the peopleEarth Day

Saturday April 22, Earth Day aims to inspire awareness of and appreciation for earth’s environment.  Since 1970 people in the US have celebrated Earth Day and 20 years later the idea went global.  Many national park sites offer special activities.  I prefer to think of every day as Earth Day.  If you can’t get to a national park site April 22nd and value science, take a public stand and find a March for Science event.

activitiesTry something or someplace new

Sometimes it’s the places in our own backyard we visit last.  Vacations often take us to far way places.  So maybe it’s time to explore that nearby national park site or return and see it with different eyes.  Hike a new trail.  Challenge yourself but be prepared and know your limits.  Attend a Ranger program or guided walk to learn more about the site.  Learn a new skill like birding, tracking, or identifying plants.  Sit somewhere quietly and absorb the view or gaze at the night sky.  Slow down and stop to smell the roses flowers along the way.

Three Gossips Arches National Park UtahThree Gossips Arches National Park Utah

Connect to a place

Because so many people are used to being connected by phone and internet don’t be surprised if a remote park location has no to little signal.  It’s OK.  You’ll survive.  Connect to the place instead and share later.

Dear park ranGer note from secret campers at campground amphitheater North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaSupport parks

Budget cuts over many years have affected hiring and maintenance backlog for the National Park Service.  Let Congress know how you feel about that.  (Note links on sidebar to find your representatives.)  There are other options to support America’s legacy.  While shopping at park sites look for partners like natural history associations who put profits back into the parks.  Donate your time and become a Volunteer in Parks (VIP) by sharing your knowledge and skills.  Donate to the National Park Foundation, the official charity of America’s national parks.

Last light Amargosa Range Badwater Basin Death Valley National Park CaliforniaBadwater Basin Death Valley National Park California

You have to know how much I love visiting, exploring, and sharing our public lands.  I believe many of you join me in appreciation of “America’s Best Idea” creating national park sites to protect and preserve our significant history and landscapes.  If you support this idea, please get out there and visit these special places.  No excuses, it’s free admission on the weekends of April 15, 16, 22, and 23 during National Park Week.

Which park site will you be visiting over National Park Week?

I am a seasonal federal employee yet this article is not representing the National Park Service and is my own opinion.

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National Park Service, National Parks and Monuments Earth Day, fee free dates, healthy, Junior Ranger, National Park Week, save money 15 Comments
28 August 2016

North Rim Grand Canyon celebrated National Park Service 100 years

August 25, 2016

National Park Service 100 birthday cake Visitor Center office North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaDespite the fact the North Rim Grand Canyon had been without phone and internet for at least three days so no sharing on social media or the park’s website, thank you Century Link, everybody at North Rim Grand Canyon celebrated National Park Service 100 years.  I’ll bet many visitors came just for the celebration.  And the cake was almost to beautiful to cut, and absolutely delicious.  Made by the owner of Kaibab Lodge located about 20 miles out of the park.

Ranger Rachel & Mandi National Park Service 100 birthday cake Visitor Center porch North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaCake complete with candles which were blown out by Ranger Rachel on her day off thus out of uniform, our Chief Interpretive Ranger, and a Junior Ranger.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gathering around cake Visitor Center porch North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThe Visitor Center porch was crowded with happy visitors taking plenty of photos and waiting for their bite-size piece of cake.  Happy Birthday wishes were heard almost constantly.

Kaibab squirrel pinata in Visitor Center North Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

Breaking pinata North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThe Kaibab Squirrel Piñata made by Ranger Amanda with three interior sections was a big hit.

Stormy sky from Lodge North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaMoments after the cleanup the clouds opened and dumped heavy rain sending everybody indoors.

Didn’t get many photos because I was working in the Visitor Center, followed by the daily 4:30 California Condor talk which was in the “sunroom” with standing room only due to the deluge and heavy lightning.  A woman visitor with at least five kids asked me why we didn’t have loud speakers to tell people to get off the rim during the storm.  I was rather puzzled and wondered if she really understood the Grand Canyon isn’t Disneyland.  This prompted my pre-program safety talk about lightning safety.  As lightning struck I’d start to count, “one-1000, two-1000, three-1000, four-1000, five-1000”  BOOM came the lightning only about one mile away.  Because lightning can travel 10 miles being on the rim for that million dollar photo probably isn’t worth it.

06 EP sign FindYourPark ShareYourParkAbout 45 visitors attended and seemed to like my newest evening program, FindYourPark ShareYourPark, plus participated by sharing their favorite national park and why.  Starting off with a brief history of the National Park Service—a little shorter than this post—followed by my history as a Ranger (because so many visitors ask), then when a visitor shared their park I put up an image on the screen.

What do you think the next 100 years will bring?

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Arizona, Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, National Park Service, National Parks and Monuments Centennial, FindYourPark 12 Comments
24 August 2016

National Park Service celebrates its 100th birthday

National Parks collage

Although the National Park Service celebrates its 100th birthday on August 25th the story of our national parks begins with an older history than the agency established to protect the now 412 sites across the United States.  Update:  Make that 413 sites as President Obama today “designated the Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument encompassing awe-inspiring mountains, forests, and waters of north-central Maine.”

Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone National Park NPS archives

First National Park

A story of long ago tells how men camping in the Yellowstone region of Wyoming thought the landscape so special it should not be developed but instead put aside for all people.  Whether this is true or not, Congress established Yellowstone National Park in 1872 “as a public park or pleasuring-ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people” and placed it “under exclusive control of the Secretary of the Interior.” making this amazing landscape America’s first National Park.  In following years the United States authorized additional national parks and monuments, many of them carved from the federal lands of the West. These, also, were administered by the Department of the Interior, while other monuments and natural and historical areas were administered by the War Department and the Forest Service of the Department of Agriculture. No single agency provided unified management of the varied federal parklands.

Buffalo soldiers at Yellowstone 1896Buffalo soldiers at Yellowstone, Wyoming 1896 (NPS archives)

Yellowstone’s first “Rangers” were African American Buffalo Soldiers, named by Native Americans because their wooly hair looked like buffalo.  They drilled and marched at Vancouver Barracks, now part of Fort Vancouver National Historic Site in Washington, and they pedaled to Yellowstone when the military wanted to see if bicycles were practical vehicles.  They were assigned to keep illegal grazing down, fight forest fires, build trails and roads, and expel poachers.  I certainly hope they didn’t have to patrol on bicycles in this rugged land.

Cliff Palace Mesa Verde National Park ColoradoMesa Verde National Park, Colorado established 1906

Antiquities Act

Signed by President Theodore Roosevelt, the 1906 Antiquities Act states  “That the President of the United States is hereby authorized, in his discretion, to declare by public proclamation historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest that are situated upon the lands owned or controlled by the Government of the United States to be national monuments…”  This Act also protects historic and prehistoric ruins from unauthorized excavation and looting.  In fact Mesa Verde was the first National Park designated to protect Native American ruins that same year.  As President from 1901 to 1909, Roosevelt signed legislation establishing five new national parks and four national monuments.

Acadia National Park Rocky Ocean Drive Coast by Kristi Rugg NPS5ABAAE29-1DD8-B71B-0B65C077C4876E7FAcadia National Park, Maine established 1916 (NPS archives)

Birth of NPS

On August 25, 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed the Organic Act creating the National Park Service (NPS), a new federal bureau in the Department of the Interior responsible for protecting the 35 national parks and monuments then managed by the department and those yet to be established. The Organic Act states that “The Service thus established shall promote and regulate the use of the Federal areas known as national parks, monuments and reservations…by such means and measures as conform to the fundamental purpose of the said parks, monuments and reservations, which purpose is 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.”

Stephen MatherStephen Mather (NPS archives)

 Horace AlbrightHorace Albright (NPS archives)

Stephen Mather, the first Director of NPS, recognized the parks needed public support and as an astute marketer aligned NPS with railroads and auto associations promoting the parks as travel destinations. Horace Albright, his deputy and later his successor as Director, both saw the benefit of extending the park system to the East to where the bulk of the population and elected officials who controlled their budget.  In 1916, President Wilson  announced the creation of Sieur de Monts National Monument and three years later signed the act establishing Lafayette National Park.  In 1929, the name changed to Acadia National Park.

National Parks can be created only through an act of Congress.  The Secretary of the Interior is usually asked by Congress for recommendations on proposed additions to the System.  The Secretary is counseled by the National Park System Advisory Board, composed of private citizens, which advises on possible additions to the System and policies for its management

Visitor Center built 1937 by CCC Cedar Breaks National Monument UtahVisitor Center built 1937 by CCC Cedar Breaks National Monument, Utah

Decades of Growth & Change

An Executive Order in 1933 transferred 56 national monuments and military sites from the Forest Service and the War Department to the National Park Service.  This action was a major step in the development of today’s truly national system of parks—a system that includes areas of historical as well as scenic and scientific importance.  During this time, the U.S. was in the depths of the Great Depression.  President Franklin Delano Roosevelt sought to change that by putting the unemployed to work through the Civilian Conservation Corps, while also conserving the country’s national resources.  Groups of men fanned out across the country, planting billions of trees, fighting wildfires and building roads and trails at places like Shenandoah and Glacier national parks.

National Park Service logo pre-1952                                          National Park Service arrowhead

On July 20, 1951, the arrowhead became the official emblem of the National Park Service.  Each image on the arrowhead represents a valuable resource that the National Parks strive to protect.  The mountain, Mount Rainier in fact, represents the amazing scenery in our national parks as well as the natural resources they provide.  The Sequoia tree represents the plants, while the American Bison stands for wildlife.  The arrowhead shape reminds us of the historical and cultural values of our parks.

Canyonlands National Park UtahCanyonlands National Park, Utah established 1964

The Wilderness Act of 1964 prompted NPS to carefully examine all park land that potentially qualified as wilderness areas and provided additional legal protection for park areas threatened with development.  The National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 required that all historical parks be entered in the National Register of Historic Places.

Guadalupe Mountains National Park view from Wilderness Ridge NPS FE42A7DF-155D-451F-67F3C5587A4D55AAGuadalupe Mountains National Park, Texas established 1966 (NPS archives)

Mission 66 was a 10-year program, initiated by National Park Service Director Conrad L. Wirth in 1956, to upgrade facilities, staffing, and resource management throughout the System by the 50th anniversary of the Service in 1966.  Congress appropriated more than a billion dollars over the 10-year period for Mission 66 improvements.  The legacy of the program included dozens of visitor centers, hundreds of employee residences, as well as the Mather and Albright employee training centers at Harpers Ferry and the Grand Canyon.

North Cascades National Park view from Sahale Peak NPS EDDF18BB-155D-4519-3ED1EC559E165A31North Cascades National Park, Washington established 1968 (NPS archives)

In 1968 the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act and National Trails System Act expanded the diversity of units in the National Park System.  And the Volunteers in the Parks Act of 1969 allowed volunteers to help with administered areas.  Then the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 directed all federal agencies to avoid or minimize environmental degradation and conduct planning with studies of potential environmental impact.

Zion National Park from Smithsonian Butte Road Scenic Backway UtahZion National Park, Utah established 1919 (NPS archives)

In an Act of August 18, 1970, Congress elaborated on the 1916 NPS Organic Act defining the NP system as “any area of land and water now or hereafter administered by the Secretary of Interior through the NPS for park, monument, historic, parkway, recreational or other purposes” and saying all units of the system have equal legal standing in a national system.

Theodore Roosevelt National Park paths to follow by Laura Thomas NPS 3306F9FB-1DD8-B71B-0B560532EBC15E0ATheodore Roosevelt National Park, North Dakota established 1978 (NPS archives)

The Endangered Species Act of 1973 required the protection of endangered or threatened species which increased the role of science in park management.  Redwood National Park was expanded in 1978 to stop the threat of logging adjacent to the park which encouraged the protection of national parks from external threats.

Glacier Bay National Park cruise ship approaches Margerie Glacier NPS 304D39D1-1DD8-B71C-07897C55389FE615Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska established 1980  (NPS archives)

In 1980, the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act converted most of the 45 million acres of national monuments President Jimmy Carter had proclaimed doubling the size of the National Park System and increasing designated wilderness.

Dry Tortugas National Park Fort Jefferson aerial looking east by NPS 3EA6FC2D-1DD8-B71C-07E07949135F5392Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida established 1992 (NPS archives)

To commemorate NPS’s 75th birthday experts from within and outside the agency made recommendations for the future urgently calling for park management grounded in scientific research.

Last light stormy sky from Lodge North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaGrand Canyon National Park, Arizona established 1919

 NPS today

The National Park System of the United States now comprises 412 areas covering more than 84 million acres in 50 states, the District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, Saipan, and the Virgin Islands. These areas are of such national significance as to justify special recognition and protection in accordance with various acts of Congress.  The National Park Service manages parks, monuments, historic sites, memorials, battlefields, preserves, recreation areas, rivers, seashores, lakeshores, parkways, and trails.  Their mission to preserve “unimpaired the natural and cultural resources and values of the National Park System for the enjoyment, education, and inspiration of this and future generations.”

Ranger Gaelyn & morning light over canyon from Lodge North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaThe role of today’s Park Rangers carry the same responsibilities as the Buffalo Soldiers, yet we are no longer generalists with individuals doing every needed job out there.  Divisions have been created for administration, facilities, interpretation and education, science resource, law enforcement, emergency medical services, search and rescue, structural fires, dispatch, and backcountry, all under the supervision of a park superintendent.  I am honored to be an Interpretive National Park Ranger helping people of the world understand and connect to these special places.

Ranger Wanda Lust & elephants Addo Elephant National Park South AfricaAddo Elephant National Park South Africa established 1931

The founding of Yellowstone National Park began a worldwide national park movement that today includes some 1,200 national parks or preserves in more than 100 nations.

FindYourPark ShareYourParkHelp celebrate ‘America’s Best Idea’ by visiting a national park site and enjoy free entry as you #FindYourPark August 25-28.  At the North Rim Grand Canyon National Park we’ll be serving birthday cake, kids can join in to break a piñata, and I’ll be presenting my new evening program at 8:30 when I share the history of the National Park Service and visitors join in by sharing their favorite National Park.

Waiting line at entrance station Arches National Park UtahArches National Park, Utah established 1971

Future of NPS

As America has grown in population over the past 100 years, so has the visitation to its most gorgeous and cherished spots.  In 1916 the total recreation visitors to all sites was 326,500.  In 2015 the number of visitors exceeded 300 million.  Could mean we need more national park sites.  Maybe we’ll see some new sites added before President Obama leaves office like Bears Ears in Utah, Birthplace of Rivers in West Virginia, Greater Grand Canyon Heritage in Arizona, and Gold Butte in Nevada.

Glacier National Park MontanaGlacier National Park, Montana established 1910 (NPS archives)

Our national parks play a critical role in protecting wildlife and ecosystems in an ever evolving landscape.  Climate change, however, is one threat that can’t be stopped by park boundaries.  It will be interesting to see what the next 100 years will bring.

 

“As we mark the centennial of the National Park Service, my question is this: What is the relevance of our National Parks in the twenty first century? And how might these public commons bring us back home to a united state of humility?”
– Terry Tempest Williams

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Hi, I’m Gaelyn, the Geogypsy

I retired after 29 summer seasons as a Park Ranger, traveling solo for 40+ years. My passions include travel, connecting to nature, photography, and sharing stories.

I started exploring US National Parks in 1977 and 20 years later became a seasonal Park Ranger.  I’ve lived full-time in a RV for 30 years working summers and playing winters.  I’m still trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow old, other than grow up.

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