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Gaming the System


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  • #3751062
    Paul Wagner
    BPL Member

    @balzaccom

    Locale: Wine Country

    On our last trip to SEKI, we met quite a few hikers heading up to Paradise Valley. We were hiking the Mist Falls Trail, one of the most popular in the park, and we kept running into to backpackers.

    The first two were hiking out just as we were hitting the trail. And wouldn’t you know it, they were not only lugging backpacks, but also hiking with a dog. A well-behaved dog on a leash, but a totally illegal dog nevertheless. A nearby hiker commented that he hoped a ranger would catch them.

    But of course, no range did catch them, because they were hiking the day before Memorial Day weekend. And that means it was the day before permits were being issued by the rangers in the park. If you arrived before that day, all you had to do was fill out the self-registration form and hit the trail.

    Those were far the last backpackers we met. In fact, we met group after group of them, more than fifty hikers in all. (The trailhead limit during official permit season is twenty-five, and those are spread out over several campgrounds. This year, the lower campground is closed, so the concentration of backpackers would have been dense, to say the least.)

    And that doesn’t count the ones who started before we did (at a leisurely 9 a.m. departure), those who started after we exited the trail at 2:15, or any of those who had started the day before and decided that the roaring Kings River wasn’t safe to cross above Paradise Valley. Those hikers would have returned to Paradise Valley to camp that night as well.

    We did a quick calculation with the wilderness rangers the next day, and figured that it was likely that nearly ninety people were camped in Paradise Valley that day. That doesn’t sound like much of a wilderness experience.

    The rangers were well aware of the problem. They explained that there is a social media group that shares tips on how to beat the National Park System. Great. All I can say is that if you camped with ninety people in Paradise Valley, you got everything you deserved for gaming the system.

    By the way, the next day we hiked the Copper Creek Trail. Didn’t see a soul. Let’s keep that just between the two of us, okay?

    Here’s a link to our trip report from those hikes: https://www.backpackthesierra.com/post/five-days-of-heaven

     

    #3751182
    Jeff McWilliams
    BPL Member

    @jjmcwill

    Locale: Midwest

    90 backpackers in a single valley?  Sounds miserable.  Then again, I’ve read that Everest Base Camp can have in the 100’s of climbers present at any given time.  According to Adventure.com, as many as 500 tourists head out on the Everest Base Camp Trek every day during peak season.  Gee, that sounds like fun. (sarcasm)

    Generally speaking, overcrowding seems to be a recurring theme across many of the boards I lurk on, including less instagram-worthy places like Red River Gorge, KY; Dolly Sods, WV; and Pictured Rocks, MI.

    I packed out trash on two separate day hikes this past weekend.   One of the hikes was a small waterfall more than 45 minutes away from where the crowds typically congregate. At the base of the waterfall I found 7 discarded beer and “twisted tea” cans just carelessly thrown among the rocks.  There are 3 trash barrels in the parking lot, and the trail is less than 1/2 long.

    I’m reminded of the saying, “We have met the enemy, and they are us.”

    #3751395
    Paul Wagner
    BPL Member

    @balzaccom

    Locale: Wine Country

    The sad part of this is that the people heading out early, before the permit season started, were expecting that they were somehow going to “sneak” a wilderness experience. I imagine what they found was something less than that.

    Maybe they got what they deserved?

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