Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Vol. 14, No. 1, September, 1948
The Extraneous and the Parks
By Dr. G. C. Ruhle, Ranger-Naturalist
Originally our national parks were set
aside with an expressed purpose of protecting the outstanding and
peculiar values found within them. They were essentially in primitive
state and the primitive was to be cherished and preserved. At the same
time limited development was to be undertaken, so that visitors might
come in reasonable ease to see, learn and enjoy. But always the
scientific significance, the primitive character, the ideal of sanctuary
for native life, both plant and animal, and the aesthetic appeal were to
fashion park policy and operation. Any departure from these standards
was to be regarded as unhealthful intrusion in the parks. Cultivation of
crowds for the sake of records or profit was considered as unworthy
violation of principle.
Within the past few years, numbers of
visitors to national park areas have mounted to staggering figures, far
surpassing a score of millions annually, and with these crowds come the
many who understand not, neither do they love. Theirs is not a visit for
inspiration, study, and appreciation of the natural phenomena. Theirs is
not respect for cleanliness and order, for propriety and fitness and
decorum, for consideration of the fellow who follows, let alone for
generations unborn. Their wake is marked by roadsides strewn with
bottles, cartons, and refuse, by vandalism to structures and natural
features, by wildfolk with lives disrupted by unnatural feeding and
fraternization, by waste meadows stripped of flowers and herbage, by
charred masts in lifeless forests swept by fire. With decreasing
revenues and man-power, park efforts have been futile to check and to
minimize the devastation. They cry of alarm is rising from those who
look beyond the use of national parks for picnicking, motoring, and
conventional activities.
Drastic possible measures have been
proposed to curb impairment of the parks from overuse and inflated
development. One hears of limitation of numbers admitted, of control of
numbers of campers in campgrounds, of removal of overnight facilities to
sites remote from principal features, of day-use of parks only. Some
advocate a screening of admittees; it were interesting to discover what
screening process and what criteria would be advocated.
It seems that greatest consideration
should be given to that which is charged by law as proper use of the
parks. My contention is that if we restrict attractions to the enjoyment
and interpretation of the features for which the park has been set
aside, the overwhelming tide of visitors will be stemmed and controlled,
and the destruction of the primitive will be checkmated. This, too, is
drastic, for by it such crowd impellents as ski carnivals, conventions,
mass picnics, are out, as are golf links, pinball machines, and dress
dinners. This means that such lures as skiing, fishing, and dancing, all
laudable in their proper sphere, be reduced to an incident in, and not
the purpose of a visit to a park. All "sports" inducements, such as ski
lifts and competitive meets, are incompatible with proper use, as
predicated by those who seek refuge in them for silence, relaxation,
aesthetic inspiration and to marvel over God's handiwork. It means
further that artificialities, such as our Lady-of-the-Woods, yes, even
the popular firefall in Yosemite, deserve the ban which has been put on
the Rock-of-Ages ceremony in Carlsbad Cavern and on the various "bear
shows" in other parks.
Crater Lake National Park has been
exceptional in its resistance to the demands of a public seeking
ordinary resort entertainment. Adequate, suitable divertissement of this
type is and should be provided elsewhere than in a national park. We
offer skiing, fishing, and similar diversions, but only as they may be
the means by which one enjoys in fuller measure the natural wonders of
the park. The Park Service welcomes the man who revels in wetting a fly
in the singing streams of our parks while noting the exuberance of the
companion ouzel, the sparkle of dancing waters, the caress of mountain
breezes, the flowers nodding and dipping in the ripples, the diamond
dew-drops on web and branchlet. Such a fisherman can have successful day
fishing and still not catch a single fish. The Park Service beckons to
the skier who delights in the wintery grandeur while gliding on langlauf
through the somber forests on the mountains.
In the face of all of the serious
impairment of the primitive in every national park, how can there be any
question about the inadvisability of a "Come one, come all" program?
Wilderness character is fragile and easily dissipated, and once lost,
seems irrevocable despite our best efforts. The need for correction is
urgent and delay is costly. Control what is offered to the visitor in a
national park, and there will quickly be natural control of the visitor
and visitor use of the park.
