On Promoting Our National Parks
March 24, 2010
SG

Toward an appreciation of Half Dome. Yosemite LocalIt will be objected that a constantly increasing population makes resistance and conservation a hopeless battle. This is true. Unless a way is found to stabilize the nation's population, the parks cannot be saved. Or anything else worth a damn. Wilderness preservation, like a hundred other good causes, will he forgotten under the overwhelming pressure of a struggle for mere survival and sanity in a completely urbanized, completely industrialized, ever more crowded environment. For my own part I would rather take my chances in a thermonuclear war than live in such a world.

— Edward Abbey, Desert Solitaire, 1968

 

YOU'VE PROBABLY NEVER HEARD OF THE NATIONAL PARKS PROMOTION COUNCIL. I hadn’t either, until the other day, just a few weeks before National Parks Week, when I received a press release, ostensibly from Washington D.C. (but sent from the email address of a California-based independent P.R. professional, the "Interim Executive Director"), proclaiming the formation of a “new organization to promote America’s National Parks.”

In anticipation of the busiest summer in the history of the national parks, read on at The Traveler's Notebook...

Article originally appeared on Yosemite, the Southern Sierra Nevada & Death Valley (http://www.sierrasurvey.com/).
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