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Pinnacles National Monument: Should It Be Labeled A National Park?

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Published Date

August 2, 2009

A congressman from California has introduced legislation to have Pinnacles National Monument renamed Pinnacles National Park. Photo of the High Peaks by Clayton Mansnerus.

There's a move afoot in Congress to have the name of Pinnacles National Monument changed to Pinnacles National Park. U.S. Rep. Sam Farr of California believes the monument's 14,500 acres with their unique geology and many species that are either threatened or endangered at the state or federal level deserve the title.

"Upgrading Pinnacles to a national park makes sense for historic, natural and economic reasons,” the Democrat said Friday. “This area is much more than rock formations. It’s a huge swatch of land with historical significance for the state, it provides an important refuge for the California condor and it has great potential for tourism revenue.”

The monument is one of the oldest ones in the National Park System, having been designated by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1908. It received its name from "rock spires and crags that are remnants of an ancient volcano," notes the National Park Service. "The volcano eroded over millions of years as it moved northward along the San Andreas Fault. Rock debris in the form of boulders has weathered and settled, leaving behind spires of volcanic rock and talus caves."

Pinnacles National Monument has two main areas of caves; the Bear Gulch Caves are near headquarters in the East District, and the Balconies Caves are near Chaparral Campground in the West District.

There is no known evidence of Native American habitation in any caves, though extensive archeological work is yet to be done, and local Native (Mutsun and Chalone) stories have largely died with their tellers. Non-Indian legends that have survived refer to the use of the caves as a hideout by the notorious central California bandito Tiburcio Vasquez, whose brutal contribution to local history ended with his hanging in San Jose, California, in 1875. Stories of hidden treasure and robber’s roosts still cycle through campfire stories and local lore, but the location of Tiburcio’s hides seem speculative, notes the Park Service.

The Civilian Conservation Corps built trails through the caves in the 1930's and these trails have endured many storms and travelers. The stairways and bridges they constructed were needed to navigate the caves without the use of ropes and ladders. Today, the Bear Gulch and Balconies caves are principle attractions for visitors at the Monument.

Rep. Farr's move drew quick praise from The Wilderness Society.

“Congressman Farr’s work to protect public lands and wild rivers in his congressional district should be lauded," said Sam Goldman, the society's California Wilderness coordinator. "The California Wild Heritage Campaign, a coalition of hundreds of businesses and organizations around the state, stands with Congressman Farr to highlight the importance of this ecological and geological gem in the Central Valley.”

Comments

I'd agree with Paul. Having visited all the 58 parks, I'd probably "rank" Pinnacles slightly above Cuyahoga and Hot Springs. This is the "bottom," and certainly not the "middle of the pack" mentioned by congressman Farr does. I don't know how many of those Farr has seen in person, but his assertion that many National Parks in the East wouldn't qualify as California country parks sounds equally strange to me. I always thought of Cuyahoga as a politically motivated abuse of the designation, however it is kind of cool to have a restored area elevated to such a status. Hot Springs is a bit odd. It has been protected since 1832, making it older than Yellowstone (1872). Once you consider the hills and the planned transition from city to wilds it's quite interesting. Apart from those two, I wouldn't call any other Park dinky.

Tuan.

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Pinnacles is a dramatic and inspiring place to me. I've hiked almost every mile of trail in the park, including the north and south wilderness trails. I've climbed dozens of the craggy spires, seen huge California Condors sail gracefully past (within 50 ft!), and watched the awesome peaks glow other-wordly orange and red in color with the last rays of sun light, then hiked back to the car in the darkness to view a clear starry sky from the parking lot before leaving.

The "Monument" seems reasonably well managed to me as is. I very much like the idea that it is often not very busy, except during the spring bloom when it is extremely busy on weekends. It doesn't much matter to me whether it is designated as a National Park or Monument, so long as it continues to receive the funding necessary to preserve and protect it.

It will be interesting to see what becomes of the National Park idea. I recall that Death Valley used to be designated a National Monument. In that case it seemed a no-brainer to make it a National Park. It also got expanded substantially as part of the deal, which was clearly a good thing (some people think that pristine sand dunes and dry lake beds are best used for ripping apart in ATVs!)

-Clayton


Split it. Let the part of the park at the East entrance enjoy National Park status with all its trimmings, but designate the more remote section that surrounds the West entrance as a primitive campground area. A typical National Park campground developed on the West side would absolutely ruin the area for what it is. It's remote, it's quiet, it has solitude, it has a pure black night sky uncontaminated by surrounding light sources, and it has a lot of wildlife that still roams the area unmolested. Please .. Leave the West side of the park alone.

To reach the East entrance one must pass through numerous communities that would benefit greatly from tourist dollars. Also, concentrating allocated National Park money on one segment of the park, the segment that surrounds the East entrance, rather than trying to spread that money over two very different areas would be more efficient and yield concentrated quality rather than spread out mediocrity.


It looks like Pinnacles will become a National Park. The bill has passed both House and Senate and is awaiting the President's signature. Surprised not to see anything on this website about it----this made the LA Times on Dec. 31st...

The Park vs. Monument designation is interesting---just visited Congaree for the first time a few days ago. Driving to the park's Visitor Center, I found it surprising that it was a National Park. However, once I got on that boardwalk behind the VC and saw all those cypress knees and big trees, I was pretty impressed. And I grew up in the swamp.


We've got a blurb coming Sunday on this. You could spend a couple months discussing/debating this sort of name change game. Kinda begs the question as to why some Colorado politicians think they need a pro bike race through Colorado National Monument to elevate it to "national park" worthy status;-) They have the power to do what Rep. Farr did for Pinnacles.

Frankly, Dinosaur National Monument more than deserves national park status it is so rich with geology and human history (both prehistoric and historic), not too mention a few paleontological resources and two fantastic rivers!


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