Showing posts with label Yosemite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yosemite. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

PARKING REQUIRED

In wilderness is the preservation of the world. ~ Henry David Thoreau   

‘Tis the season. Enjoying open-air parks provides healthful benefits during these pandemic and any other times. This year, after spending much of 2020 sequestered inside, evermore people have decided that enjoying outdoor parks is required, including us. On a regular basis, we go hiking in Tilden Regional Park that beckons several blocks from our home. Tilden is part of the impressive East Bay Regional Park District, which comprises almost 125,000 acres of woodland and trails on the eastern side of the San Francisco Bay. It is the largest urban regional park district in the US.

Humans have been hiking for as long as we’ve been hunting and gathering, which probably started two million years ago. Otzi, the ancient “ice-man,” died while hiking high in the Austro-Italian Alps about 5300 years ago, 5260 years before the fleece jacket was first worn by alpinists. He must have been quite chilly.

More recently, in 1336 the poet Petrarch recounted that he and his brother hiked and climbed for pleasure to the top of Mt. Ventoux, a 6,200ft mountain in southern France. Millions of people have walked on pilgrimages throughout many centuries in pursuit of moral and/or spiritual quests.

The interest in taking a walk through the countryside for its own sake perhaps became more earnest during the 18th century, possibly associated with the rise of Romanticism which elevated the importance of nature.

When cities significantly grew in the during the late 18th century – early-19th century Industrial Revolution, devastating yellow fever, cholera and diphtheria epidemics closely followed. The miasma theory of disease remained prominent and promulgated that diseases were caused by miasma, a toxic form of "bad air.”

Thus, a popular movement became dedicated to increasing “good air” spaces that could provide better public health and refuge from crowded city surroundings. Park-building was a reasoned response to these terrible diseases. Frederick Law Olmsted, whose first child died of cholera, was a significant proponent of such green spaces. In addition to being a landscape architect, he was a public health official. In 1858, Olmsted designed Central Park in New York City, as well as over 100 other public parks across the US.

Folks who want to a walk through the countryside in the 21st century assume tacitly that their journey usually will be on public land, like Tilden Park. But what is a “park”? It can be many things.

There are 22,493 public city parks in the US, according to most recent information. They provide an impressive array of facilities, including golf courses, dog parks, baseball diamonds, basketball hoops and playgrounds for local residents. Chugach Park, mostly within Anchorage, is the US’s largest city park, covering more than 464,000 acres. 

America’s oldest public city park is the Boston Common. Founders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony city bought 50 acres of land from William Blaxton in 1634, allowing families to use it principally as a cow pasture. As folks kept putting additional cows on the common it became overgrazed – a prototypical example of the tragedy of the commons – Colony leaders limited the number of cows to 70 at a time.

Not only cows were using the Common; Ann Hibbins was executed for witchcraft in 1658. Mary Dyer was one of four Quakers hanged in 1660 for defying a law that banned Quakers from the Colony. Genuine park status for the Boston Common arose in 1830, when grazing cows were officially banned and two-legged beings were finally ascendant.

I grew up in Philadelphia, which is home to one of the largest urban parks in the nation. Fairmount Park was developed in 1855 to protect the city’s public water supply and preserve beneficial green spaces within its rapidly-growing industrialization. Fairmount Park is now associated with other Philadelphia parks, including Wissahickon Valley Park. I enjoyed lots of youthful explorations in this park, many with Skeeter, my best buddy. Perhaps the most memorable adventure was the time we found a battered, chrome-plated, one-armed slot-machine of unknown origin lying next to Wissahickon Creek. No, it wasn’t showing 3 aces.

Let’s move up a geographic level and consider state parks. There are over 6,600 public state parks in the US, covering 14 million (M) acres. The oldest state park is claimed by Niagara Falls State Park in NY, established in 1885. However, Georgia’s Indian Springs State Park has been operated since 1825, but did not gain official “state park” status until 1931. Also, in 1864 the federal government ceded Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove to be a California state park, which lasted for 26 years. The largest state park in the US is Adirondack Park, founded in 1892. Its 6M acres in northeastern NY include substantial privately-owned inholdings.

The first federal park was created by Congress in 1872 with the Yellowstone National Park Act. Since then, 19 different flavors of federal parks have been created by the National Park Service (NPS), which is part of the Interior Department. Given that the NPS just celebrated its 105th birthday and that there are now 423 federal parks of all types, it’s not that surprising there are so many types. The NPS oversees 84 million acres of land plus over 4 million acres of oceans, lakes and reservoirs. Unlike all the other park types, only Congress can designate a National Park.

These different types of parks include: 63 National Parks, the crown jewel of federal parkdom; 84 National Monuments that are managed by not only by the NPS, but also by the Fish and Wildlife Service (part of the Dept. of Agriculture) and the Bureau of Land Management (part of the Interior Dept.). Among other park types there are 19 National Preserves, 18 National Recreation Areas, including the Golden Gate Recreation Area which was the second most-visited “park” in 2020, and 25 National Battlefields.

The largest US national park is Alaska's Wrangell-St. Elias National Park & Preserve, at 13.2M acres. The largest national park in the world is the Northeast Greenland National Park (NP), created in 1974. This park covers a gigantic 240M acres, which is 2.4x larger than all of California’s bountiful acreage.

We often delight in the notion that the US “invented” the concept of national parks. Franklin D. Roosevelt stated, “There is nothing so American as our national parks.” Although true, it’s mistaken that Yellowstone was the world’s first national park. Nope, 94 years before Yellowstone became a national park, the local Mongolian government of the Qing dynasty created Bogd Khan Uul National Park not far from its capital, Ulaanbaatar. This Park is an impressively distant 9,320 miles from Berkeley. The expanse to Bogd Khan Uul would not even be a medium jaunt plus a few new turns for an Artic Tern, a bird that migrates an Olympian 44,000 miles each year.

Spreading our wings, we recently visited Kings Canyon-Sequoia National Parks in the Sierra Nevada and had a fine time. Sequoia became our second national park in 1890, six days before Yosemite. The picture below of me and our friend Katie shows us on top of the Mark Twain sequoia tree stump in Sequoia NP. That was one huuuuge tree before it was felled in 1891. Slabs of it were sent to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, the Smithsonian Natural History Museum in Washington, DC and a museum in London to prove that giant sequoias actually existed and weren’t just another “tall tale” from America’s wild west.

Atop the Mark Twain tree stump in Sequoia NP.

Before covid, in 2019 Yosemite had 2.4x as many visitors than Kings Canyon plus Sequoia. It wasn’t always that way; in 1969 Yosemite had only 1.2x as many visitors. The significant increase in Yosemite’s visitors during the past 50 years (93%) has been a conscious NPS policy, requiring substantial investments in human and physical infrastructure. Not all parks’ visitation has grown. Kings Canyon’s 1969 visitation was 1.5x bigger than in 2019. Nevertheless, smaller parks like Kings Canyon and Sequoia that did not receive such added infrastructure are doing fine.

Great Smoky Mountains National Park has been the most-visited park every year since 1944, with 12.1M visitors in 2020; there were 12.5M visitors in 2019. This summer the NPS is dealing with large upsurges in national park attendance as more folks seek gorgeous outside vistas, illustrated in this picture from Utah’s Arches NP.

Arches NP, July 2021.

No matter what local, state, national or international park you visit, for those who want to gain from having a great time hiking, backpacking, swimming or camping outdoors, I wish you many happy trails.

 



 



Wednesday, December 27, 2017

THINGS THAT SHOULDN’T BE AND SOME THAT SHOULD

Be realistic: Plan for a miracle. ~ Osho

Reflecting on the past 12 months, I offer here my resolutions about things that shouldn’t be around (but are) and things that should remain (please).

things that shouldn’t be

The Republicans’ fiscal follies.  As I noted previously, the Republicans’ hasty, nasty, damaging tax “reform” foibles will impede growth, exacerbate income inequality, eventually hike taxes of all who aren’t already wealthy, provide large, unneeded tax reductions for the 1% and require giant, growth-deflating deficit-financing. The passage of this miserable “reform” will initiate the Republicans’ long-desired slicing of Medicare and Medicaid expenses among other government discretionary expenditure reductions; all in the hypocritical name of deficit reduction. What’s not to loathe?  
A yellow light for autonomous cars.  Call me a Luddite, but I vote to take the “auto” out of autonomous (self-driving) vehicles (AVs), or at least be very cautious about AVs. The wheeled techies’ acceleration for introducing software-driving cars is foolhardy hype. Autonomous vehicles face very large challenges (beyond mere code) that advocates underrate. It only took one hour for the recently-launched Las Vegas autonomous shuttle to get into an accident that displayed an overabundance of “A” and a lack of sufficient “I” (as in autonomous-driving’s AI). Remember the accident that killed a Tesla driver in Florida last year? What could possibly go wrong when in the all too near future (according to proponents), herds of AVs start sharing the road, any road, with scads of unpredictable, entirely human drivers? I seriously doubt it will be pretty. Raising more caution signs and yellow blinking lights for AVs now is compulsory. More on this later.
Fees for luggage placed in planes’ overhead bins are very high highway robbery. This grievance is particularly directed at you, Maurice Gallagher, CEO of Allegiant Airlines, but unfortunately not limited just to you. Airlines’ unbundled pricing has steadily gained altitude since American Airlines began separately charging for checked baggage in 2008. Last year the airlines’ “ancillary revenues” totaled as sky-high $82 billion. Such stratospheric over-monetization of services should be permanently grounded, now.
The FICA tax wage limit, currently set at $127,200. No one pays social security tax on income over this wage limit. There should be no upper wage limit for the FICA payroll tax that underwrites the Social Security (SS) Trust Funds. In October, Social Security benefits, totaling $77.87 billion that were provided to 67.76 million recipients. The wage limit makes the FICA Social Security tax unnecessarily regressive and deprives SS of millions of dollars every year. For almost one-half of unmarried middle class beneficiaries, SS provides at least 90% of their total income. US median household income increased by just 3.2% last year. American CEOs got an 8.5% raise in 2016, their biggest pay increase in three years.
The top 16% of income-earners make $127,000 or more. They can afford the 6.2% FICA/SS tax; why aren’t they paying their share on all their income like the other 84% do? Oh I remember, the Republicans always protect their wealthy, VIDs (Very Important Donors). Among several advantages, eliminating the FICA/SS wage limit would shore up the Social Security Trust Funds that are expected to be exhausted by 2035 and may extend the solvency of the fund by 58 years. I know it’s a dream, but eliminate the FICA/SS tax wage limit.
Dark new energy subsidy.  The administration has recommended a new energy subsidy that shouldn’t happen. The Secretary of Energy recently proposed that electric utilities operating coal-fired power plants be mandated to have an extra 90-day supply of fuel at each plant to enhance the “reliability and resiliency” of the electric power grid. This is utter twaddle. A decision from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is expected by January 10. Extra fuel stockpiling is unnecessary and costly for rate-payers (you and me) and everyone else. If the FERC does its job properly (rather than taking a political low-road), each Commissioner will vote down this bunkum proposal. Creation of this subsidy for coal producers flies in the face of well-established plant and grid operations, rationality and market reality. The tax-expenditures for this nasty subsidy will cost plenty in terms of atmospheric CO2, NOx and SOx.
Critics have called this “emergency” coal supply proposal a misguided “cash for cronies” scheme to help the coal industry that has strongly backed the president. Their interests as well as those of other fossil-energy producers are well represented in the current administration’s Cabinet and senior policy-makers. This costly change will continue coal-fueled electricity generation that produces an unhealthier, browner future. Speaking of which…
Coal-fired power plants.  Each of the nation’s 381 coal-fired power plants (down from 616 in 2006) should stop operating tomorrow. Burning coal to produce electricity despoils the environment and contributes to higher personal and public health costs. Last year, fossil fuels accounted for about 65% of the nation’s electricity generation mix, coal accounted for 30.4%. Total renewable energy that includes hydropower, wind, biomass, solar and geothermal accounted for 14.9%; nuclear energy was 19.7%. My local utility, PG&E, has 30% renewable sources and no coal. Thankfully, there is not one coal-fired generation plant anywhere in California. The sun is justifiably rising for solar, wind and other renewable generation; it should set ASAP for wholly horrid coal.
Removing protections from America’s wild places.  The president’s recent removal of at least 1,143,800 pristine wild acres within Canyonlands and Bears Ears National Monuments for private uranium, petroleum and gas development reflects yet another misguided facet of the president’s fundamentally mistaken priorities. Go Patagonia! Keep America as wild as possible.
Scott Pruitt, Administrator of the US Environmental Protection Agency. This man and his title is a first-order oxymoron, with emphasis on the last word’s second syllable. Remove him.
The final thing that shouldn’t be is our zero-sum, Kylo-like President Donald J. Trump. QED.

WHAT I’M THANKFUL FOR

Despite my listed nine “things that shouldn’t be,” there are, fortunately, five superior items in my life that more than compensate for the previous nine. I remain an Optimista because of them. I’m thankful for these important, valued (but usually unspoken) people, places and things.

Upbeat Music.  Music of all sorts is a joy to listen to. I’m thankful for this curiously surprising story that concluded “Sad songs have become less common all over the world.” It presents results of researchers from my grad school alma mater that found during the past seven years English-language songs are more upbeat than before. The media incessantly presents the world and our neighborhoods as going to hell in a handbasket, and that the world is in persistent “crisis” of one sort or another. Maybe we should listen to music more and be Optimistas rather than Pessimistas. It’s a wholly worthy thought. Are our musical glasses half-full, rather than half-empty? I hope so. Upbeat music makes it far easier.
Good health.  With the staunch support of my family and friends, together with my own active efforts, I’ve managed to retain reasonably good health as I’ve become a septuagenarian. Here’s hoping it may continue for me, and you.
Yosemite National Park and each of the other 57 national parks. I take only Yosemite for granite. Thank goodness for Half-Dome, Crater Lake, Valley Forge, the Grand Tetons, Zion and the Everglades, among others. Thank you, Teddy. We need to keep all 58 vital.
My marvelous friends and my treasured family: Courtney, Lindsay, Cody, Ainslie, Elias, Liam and Alder. You’ve given me fun, hope, smiles, reward, satisfaction, education and promise. Thank you.
And most of all, Patrice.  Thank you dear Patrice for being the best part of my life and for putting up with my eccentricities and shortcomings.