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Practically Speaking

Kyle and her husband moved to Brookfield in 1986. She became active in local politics and started blogging in 2004. Her focus is primarily on local issues but often includes state and national topics, too. Kyle looks at things from the taxpayers' perspective in a creative, yet down to earth way, addressing them from a practical point of view.

America's National Park Service turned 94 this week

History, Government / Bureaucracy, National Parks, TRAVEL, United States

Old Faithful Geyser at Yellowstone National Park

Did you know America's National Park Service just turned 94?

The National Parks Foundation sent out an email this week to commemorate this birthday on Aug. 25th.

It read,

"Turning 94 is a cause for celebration!"

"...Known to park rangers as Founders Day, this anniversary reminds us that America did something unprecedented when, at the urging of its citizens, it preserved millions of acres of pristine wilderness for the enjoyment of all people in perpetuity."

"Today that wilderness is called Yellowstone National Park. It was the world's first national park and remains an inspiration to our nation and the world."



 Since we recently returned from our annual week and a half vacation at Yellowstone, the email caught my eye. Was that why Yellowstone chose August 25th as the grand opening date for their new, $27 Million dollar Old Faithful Visitor Center?

This new center has been under construction for 2 summers now, and the size of it is immense. Unfortunately, it seems out of scale to its surroundings and rather out of sync with the non-intrusive philosophy of the park system. My spouse quipped it reminded him of Disney's Blizzard Beach chalet. (It does!)

Many of us who frequent the geyser areas at Yellowstone wish they would have put a little of that money into providing much needed restroom facilities, instead of building the Taj Mahal of Visitor Centers. After all, people come to see the park's natural wonders, not museum displays.



I'm not asking for much, just an additional outhouse here and there. At present, one lone outhouse serves the entire Upper Geyser Basin trail area (where Old Faithful is located), and 2 serve at Fountain Paint Pot in the Lower Geyser area--better plan ahead, there is always a line of at least 15 people there. Four geyser areas in this 12 mile stretch have no facilities at all.

Now most people don't expect the same creature comforts at a National Park as they do at Disney World, but this is where the Park Service could learn a few things from Disney. Disney provides ample restroom space that is kept pretty clean, considering the traffic volume. The Park Service provides woefully inadequate restroom facilities, some being absolutely filthy, for their 3.2 million or so visitors each year.

Still, millions of people each year put up with restroom shortcomings in order to see these wondrous, wild places. But I digress.

If you enter Yellowstone from the northwest entrance, you travel through what is known as the Roosevelt Arch.* The inscription above reads: "FOR THE BENEFIT AND ENJOYMENT OF THE PEOPLE".

As one who has benefited and enjoyed Yellowstone and 45-some other National Parks, Sites, and Monuments, I am grateful some of these very special places were set aside for our enjoyment. (I still have many more to visit, check out the complete list.)

It is not too soon to start planning your next National Park vacation to see some of the most beautiful scenery this side of heaven. Yellowstone, for example, is still booked up through September, so it pays to plan ahead. (Check Xanterra's website for availability.) There is still time to visit one of the many parks to our south, which offer great fall and winter vacation options. Let the planning begin!

If you have questions about a park or site, feel free to email me for specifics. If I have been there, I am happy to share information.

Coming up next: Going to a National Park? Have fun, be safe, & remember you aren't at Disney World!

Past Posts: You Can Make 2009 National Park Reservations Now
Make Reservations Now for Summer 2008, includes helpful book titles


*Yellowstone is known as America's 1st National Park, set aside by an Act of Congress in 1872. Yosemite was established as a park before that, but as a State Park, not a National Park. It later became a National Park.
 

Links: 

counter hit xanga

Brookfield7, BetterBrookfield, Vicki McKenna, Jay Weber, The Right View Wisconsin, Randy Melchert, Mark Levin, The Heritage Foundation, CNS News, Breitbart BigGovernment

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  1. I never hit the road without my National Park Passport.

    It's a terrific way to keep track of the parks and monuments and when you where there.

    Craters of the Moon is cool.
  2. I found Herbert Hoover and Presidential Library a real surprise too. I was totally unfamiliar with his humanitarian work with the people of Belgium, for example.
  3. Actually, I have been to most of the places in South Dakota which "border" I-90. I've seen Devil's Tower from a distance. One year driving back from Colorado on I-80, we stopped at the Herbet Hoover site outside of Iowa City. We thought it would be a BIG JOKE with dioramas of bread lines, soup kitchens, speakeasys, and suicidal stockbrokers jumping out of windows. Instead it was a pleasant diversion and close enough for a day trip.
  4. Ah, yes, Sturgis! (Not a National Park/Site though.) It is fun to look at the bikers on I-90 though on their way to their big week. Although I have never attended, I have a feeling you are too right on the "whole joint" being "an incorporated outhouse."

    We found that hotel rates even as far away as Sundance, WY were sky high during the hog fest so we came back home through North Dakota instead.

    Antietam and Shiloh are on our Bucket List.
  5. Ms. Kyle, you forgot Sturgis, SD.! If you go in 2011, go between August 8th and 14th riding your hog. The air conditioning is great at speeds above 80 MPH and you don't have to worry about bathroom facilities - the whole joint becomes an incorporated outhouse!

    Don't get me started on Civil War battle fields or I'll bore you stiff talking about Antietam and Shiloh Battle Fields.
  6. Mortified, if it was just breathtaking scenery and history, many other venues would suffice, and have. But if geysers are a priority, as they are with us, that pretty much narrows it down to Yellowstone, the most concentrated collection of geysers in the world.

    Last year we did manage to take in Effigy Mounds, Herbert Hoover, Lincoln Home, Lincoln Birthplace, Cumberland Gap, Land Between the Lakes, Fort Donelson, Chickamauga & Chattanooga Military Parks, Castillo De San Marcos, Jefferson National Expansion & Arch, Ulysses S. Grant Home, in addition to Yellowstone. (Not all in one trip) :)

    Our strategy when planning a trip to a major park/parks area, such as the 4 Corners, is that I route us through whatever parks are somewhat along the way. That is how we discovered Black Canyon of the Gunnison (truly remarkable) on the way to Mesa Verde and Colorado Monument (rather Zion like) on the way home from Arches.

    As for whizzing through South Dakota, do slow down near the border with Minnesota for Pipestone, make an appointment to see Minute Man, and of course take in the Badlands, Mt. Rushmore, Wind Cave, and Jewel Cave. Once into Wyoming, Devil's Tower is a must too.

    So true Elf and Tom G, we are so blessed to have so many choices. This is making me want to pack up the car and hit the road again!
  7. the ken burns tv series is a must. government does work.
  8. M.W.A.R. - The Apostle Islands are superb, and the upper Great Lakes offer some of the world's finest cruising waters. Acadia National Park in Maine is spectacular, and we had the good fortune to hike as much of Rocky Mountain National Park as we coiuld in four days this summer. The Shenandoah Valley and Glacier National will always be my favorites, but there are no bad choices here.
  9. If you've missed seeing Mesa Verde in the Four Corners Area, you've missed an attraction both beautiful and curious. Just the drive up onto the mesa is worth the trip. But then as you descend on a footpath round a corner overlooking the ruins themselves, the only word possible is "magnificent"!

    How blessed we are to have so much to see and do in this country!
  10. Another favorite - Crater Lake in Oregon. I actually enjoyed it more than anything I saw in Yellowstone, and even the Grand Canyon. Breathtaking view of a stunning natural wonder.
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