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Yosemite Valley Campers Coalition |
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Los Angeles Times Monday, August 13, 2007 Sleeping in a bag or in a hotel bed? YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK -- A creature of habit, Brian Ouzounian joins a swallow-like migration each summer to this park's glacier-cleaved valley..
Ouzounian has camped in Yosemite Valley in
nearly every one of his 57 years, setting down stakes a week at a
time with family and friends at the panoramic junction of the Merced
River and Tenaya Creek.
He lives for those days and the memories of
them. Morning hikes to the valley rim. Inner-tube afternoons on the
river. Nights in a sleeping bag, under the stars. First light
striking Glacier Point. Sizzling bacon, chirping birds and the
burbling river play a symphony to his soul.
But this family tradition, which used to seem
as solid as the granite cliffs, now appears imperiled to Ouzounian.
Add us, he says, to the federal list: The endangered campers of
Yosemite.
Ouzounian, who petitions and protests, writes
letters and attends park meetings, believes he is leading a fight
against the extinction of his kind.
People may still come in RVs and SUVs loaded
with tents and sleeping bags and
Coleman stoves, but the opportunities for camping -- the
bargain-basement entree in Yosemite Valley -- have been in decline
over the last decade.
After a New Year's flood in 1997 cut a
destructive swath through the valley, National Park Service
officials abandoned several riverfront campgrounds, justifying it as
a way to shrink humanity's footprint and give nature a hand up along
the banks of the Merced.
The number of valley campsites fell 43%, from
828 slots to 475 today -- and only about 300 of those remaining are
the car-camper spots Ouzounian, a general contractor from
West Los Angeles, considers akin to Mom and apple pie.
Just count the dearly departed, he says. Upper
River Campground -- gone. Lower River Campground -- gone. Lower
Pines Campground -- shrunk roughly by half. The group campground
across the creek -- gone.
The past quarter of a century has seen a shift
in lodging tastes -- and as baby boomers have given way to
Generations X and Y, the number of tent and RV campers in national
parks across the U.S. has dropped 44%. Meanwhile, the number of
visitors in fixed-roof park lodgings has barely changed at all.
The camping decline comes amid debate over how
to balance nature's needs with the recreational agenda of national
park visitors. Ouzounian believes Yosemite's planning efforts "have
profit motives written all over them." The valley now has nearly
three times more lodging units than campsites, and in that he sees a
socioeconomic plot, a push to place more valley visitors in
expensive accommodations.
Campers, he says, are the underdogs: "We're at
the bottom of the food chain. You've got a camping culture that's
more than a century old, but the park service really doesn't want to
hear from us."
For nearly three decades, Ouzounian has been
trying his red-faced best to be heard.
As a young man just turned 30, he began
jousting with park officials in 1980 over a general management plan
that proposed a campsite reduction. He later helped launch the
Yosemite Valley Campers Coalition, like-minded car campers worried
that park service leaders have, as Ouzounian puts it, "confiscated"
whole campgrounds without proper public discourse.
His latest effort is an online petition
calling for the return of the flood-closed campsites. His goal is to
send the thoughts of 10,000 campers to Congress. At last count, he
had collected more than 700 signatures and testimonials from as far
away as
Massachusetts and
Florida.
Diane Mello wrote that camping provides a more
"intimate" Yosemite experience than hunkering down in a hotel room.
Joel Swan of
Illinois spoke of the slippery slope if the National Park
Service discriminates against those of modest means. Richard Conklin
suggested that "John
Muir is turning over in his grave."
Or maybe he's applauding. Park officials
insist they remain bullish on camping, but they point out that times
have changed.
A few generations back, 80% of Yosemite
visitors spent the night, said park spokesman Scott Gediman. Now
just 20% do, a sure sign that people's vacation patterns are
changing. They're taking fewer days off, planning shorter
excursions. Research shows that in the park, hotel-style
accommodations are king.
Meanwhile, the park service is struggling to
strike a delicate equilibrium between accommodating 3 million annual
visitors -- making
Yosemite the nation's third-most-visited park behind
Great Smoky Mountains and the
Grand Canyon -- and protecting nature. Even before the flood
sent the Merced a dozen feet above its banks, "there was a
realization that the riverfront wasn't the best place for a
campground," Gediman said, taking note of the fragile flora and
river biota that can be unwittingly trampled in the zeal to
experience the great outdoors.
"Camping is just as valid now as it was 50
years ago," Gediman insists. "We just need to do it differently."
That will almost certainly mean more campsites
built outside the mile-wide valley. A park study identified 400 to
600 potential out-of-valley campsites, though none have been
created.
In the valley, Gediman said, it will mean
designing campsites that maximize space and ease environmental
impacts -- special RV spaces with electrical hookups to eliminate
noisy on-board generators, and walk-in campgrounds that squeeze more
people into a smaller space. The goal is to eventually shoehorn in
638 valley campsites.
Construction was set, he said, for 30 such RV
spaces and 59 walk-in campsites, but a long-running legal fight with
environmental groups over plans for Yosemite Valley has put the work
on hold. Gediman said he finds it ironic that Ouzounian is in the
court record supporting a lawsuit that is blocking campsite
construction.
"Those sites would have been finished and in
use by now," he said. "Brian has cut off his nose to spite his
face."
Ouzounian has earned a reputation among park
officials. At public meetings and in private, he has at times left
staffers feeling bullied, Gediman said.
"Raising your voice, antagonizing people and
being rude isn't the way to get it done," Gediman said.
Ouzounian is unapologetic. "I'm their worst
nightmare," he said.
Such tough talk seems incongruous coming from
a man who can turn misty-eyed from campfire memories. As he walks
amid the valley's campground conifers, the balding father of three
college-age kids waxes philosophical.
He points out that
Abraham Lincoln was the first president to recognize
Yosemite's grandeur. He delights in quoting Frederick Law Olmsted,
the pioneering landscape architect who in 1865 visited
Yosemite and wrote of the effect of nature's beauty on the
human soul and government's responsibility to preserve the nation's
wild lands.
To Ouzounian, car campers are the embodiment
of Olmsted's philosophy because they enjoy the outdoors with far
less impact than visitors who spend the night in a hotel or come for
the day.
While day trippers clog roads with
pollution-spewing cars, campers get around on bikes, he says. They
bring their own food instead of relying on the vast infrastructure
of delivery trucks and food-service employees and utilities needed
by restaurants. They bunk down in tents that don't require maid
service, laundered sheets and all the rest.
"That's an environmental equation the park
would rather you not know," Ouzounian said.
His ire for the park service isn't part of his
DNA. As a boy, Ouzounian saw rangers as his idols. Each summer, his
grandparents,
Yosemite campers since the 1920s, invited the campground
ranger over for dinner.
"Now a ranger walks up and you wonder when
they're going to pull their citation book out," he said.
He's been chided by bear-wary rangers to put
away toothpaste tubes left out for five minutes, and cited for
hanging up a fly trap that could disrupt insect life.
It all seems petty to Ouzounian, particularly
in contrast with the old traditions. Back in the day, tents were
pitched wall to wall, he said. The tight quarters yielded lifelong
friendships, families he has known for generations. They attend one
another's weddings, graduations and funerals.
When he was a boy, his big thrill each morning
was making Grandpa's fire. It was stoked under the lid of a
55-gallon oil drum, jury-rigged with a piece of rusty tin pipe as a
flue.
The kids slept on old Army-style steel cots.
Sleep came only after the evening fire show concluded off Glacier
Point. (The summer ritual of sending an avalanche of blazing cinders
off the cliff was halted in 1968.)
On the banks of the Merced River, Grandpa
would demonstrate how to make a water wheel out of a tin can,
cutting flaps and then mounting it on a stick.
When the old man died, the family paid tribute
to his lifetime love of camping in
Yosemite. They bowed at his open casket and placed a piece of
black oak inside.
North Pines Campground has always been
Ouzounian's haunt. All things being equal, he tries for a space on
the narrow spit at the junction of the creek and river.
The family used to simply show up and elbow
into the horde.
Now a week's stay requires going online five
months in advance to make a reservation -- and this year,
Ouzounian's repeated attempts to reserve a site failed. The Internet
throngs sold out the valley within the first minute the reservation
system was open.
Ouzounian managed to hitch on at a campsite
reserved by friends. But instead of relaxing, he spent much of the
lovely July week walking the campgrounds, talking up his cause and
handing out placards: "SAVE
NORTH PINES: Planned for Removal by the National Park
Service."
His fear on this front stems from the master
plan for Yosemite Valley, approved at the beginning of the decade
over the protests of critics who said it favored hotel lodging and
smacked of elitism. Among the targets for removal was
North Pines, the Ouzounian clan's second home.
Park officials now say their plans have
changed and that Ouzounian's worries are unwarranted. Battered by
litigation and criticism,
Yosemite planners in 2005 redrafted the park's
riverside zoning, sparing the campground.
Ouzounian refuses to buy that
North Pines is safe, saying he trusts "nothing that spews
from the mouths at the park service."
Walking past the long-ago spot on the Merced
River where his grandparents used to pitch their tent, he unhappily
points out a split rail fence erected to keep the public at bay. A
park service sign advises that the riverbank's plants can't
withstand the foot traffic.
To Ouzounian it's a line of demarcation, a
sign of decline and loss, the beginning of the end of the culture he
used to know.
"The people I represent want their kids to
wake in the morning hearing the birds, hearing the river, hearing
the wind go through the trees," he said. "You can't get that inside
a motel room."
--
For more information about
Yosemite National Park and the Yosemite Valley Campers
Coalition, go to
www.nps.gov/archive /yose/planning
and
www.yosemitevalleycampers.org.
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Painting of Half Dome by Artist Jocelyn Audette Petition signer # 160 |
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