Editor's note: This updates with Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Sagamore Hill National Historic Site, and Saint Croix Island International Historic Site all closing Friday, and some seasonal openings at Acadia National Park pushed back.
While staff at Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve in Colorado prepared to close the park Friday night, Guadalupe Mountains National Park in Texas closed earlier in the day, and staff at Cape Cod National Seashore in Massachusetts was dealing with garbage and vandalism.
At Great Sand Dunes, staff planned to close the park at midnight. This closure includes all public access points, park roads, and backcountry access, a park release said.
"We have been monitoring conditions at the park and working closely with the local public health officials,” said Superintendent Pamela Rice. “Due to increasing visitation, we can no longer mitigate the risk of exposure to the novel coronavirus and agree that it is in the public’s best interest to close at this time.”
Guadalupe Mountains Superintendent Eric Brunnemann announced Friday afternoon that they would close at 6 p.m.
"We will continue to keep in close communication with state and local partners as we progress through this closure period, and look forward to resuming operations again in the future," he said.
At Cape Cod, staff discovered vandalism and dumping at seashore locations, and have observed numerous regulations not being followed.
Construction materials were dumped in the Doane Rock area in Eastham, and household trash was dumped at Great Island in Wellfleet, a park release said. Fencing was vandalized in Truro. In addition, there have been increased violations, including pets on trails, in shorebird areas, and off leash; and bicycles, dirt bikes, and ATVs on trails.
“This is a challenging time for everyone, including the national seashore,” said Superintendent Brian Carlstrom. “Following guidance from the administration, CDC public health guidance, and the governor’s orders, we are maintaining essential functions with a small staff at the seashore. We do not have the resources to address these careless acts. We will issue citations to those who do not follow regulations, and we may be forced to close areas of the seashore if violations continue.”
All public buildings in the seashore, including restrooms, are closed. Trash cans have been removed to reduce staff exposure to illness. The public is urged to follow the Massachusetts governor’s stay at home advisory.
“We understand how important it is for people to have the opportunity to get outdoors to relieve some of the stress that COVID-19 is causing,” said Carlstrom. “We urge the public to respect their seashore, follow all guidance and regulations, and act responsibly."
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site in New York also closed to the public Friday, as did Saint Croix Island International Historic Site in Maine.
"Visitors are coming to Sagamore Hill in increasing numbers that makes proper social distancing on our popular trails more and more difficult,” said acting Superintendent Jonathan Parker. “We are committed to continued close coordination with our state and local partners as we progress through this closure period and we’re encouraging our visitors to explore the high-quality virtual visit options on our website.”
In Maine, Acadia National Park announced it would delay the spring opening of its campgrounds until June 15, and that the Hulls Cove Visitor Center, normally set to open May 1, wouldn't open before June 1, and that the Sieur de Monts Visitor Center, normally set to open first Saturday in May, would be delayed at least until June 15.
Comments
Rather than be a conservative puppet, when I was in college i was taught to use critical thinking, which in part includes evaluating the legitimacy of the source document.
Your folks just don't sound all that objective, and hence may be unreliable as a relay point.
This isn't your first offense at this sort of thing.
Brian, perhaps you should read it. Townhall didn't write the study and they didn't create the statistics.
Rick, be as critical in your analysis as you like, but be critical of the actual study not the method of delivery. Please, tell us where Professor Yitzhak Ben Israel of Tel Aviv University got the facts wrong, we don't care how much you dislike townhall.com. Here are some other outlets that carried the story. Are these all unobjective sources?
https://www.timesofisrael.com/top-israeli-prof-claims-simple-stats-show-...
https://asiatimes.com/2020/04/israeli-professor-offers-alternate-coronav...
http://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dr20200415-top-israeli-prof-clai...
I suppose like the last time when I provided evidence from sources such as the NYT you will slink away from your lack of legitimate sources accusations and just disappear.
No, EC, perhaps I shouldn't read anything from any right-wing propaganda machine like Fox, Limbaugh, or Townhall. You do the reading and then let all of us know what how wonderful the author is. As I've said to you many times in the past: you're on the wrong website. NPT cares about science, medical expertise, and facts.
Brian, as I did with Rick, I will give you multiple sources of the study from non "right-wing propaganda".
https://www.timesofisrael.com/top-israeli-prof-claims-simple-stats-show-...
https://asiatimes.com/2020/04/israeli-professor-offers-alternate-coronav...
http://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dr20200415-top-israeli-prof-clai...
You are the one ignoring the science, medical expertise and facts. Show us how his analysis is wrong.
Hmm, seems you don't need to go to a park to hear the chirp of crickets.
Three or four news accounts of the same story is not the same as a study in a peer reviewed journal. But, when someone who is not an expert in a particular field puts forth a "study" that is not consistent with what is the vast consensus from people who have spent their entire lives studying a particular field, it is right to be skeptical of this study until it has been reviewed by people who are experts in the field. What we are seeing here is the same as happens with those who are climate change deniers. Deniers like to latch onto things that reinforce their own delusions of their expertise, and not what people who are real experts say. Right now we are in the early stages of this pandemic. I would go with those who have spent their life studying a particular field. Meanwhile, the US with a bit over 4% of the world's population has over 30% of reported covid cases, and almost 1/4 of the total deaths.
Thanks, Grizz! Your comment was a breath of fresh air.
Both climate change and pandemics are symptoms of overpopulation and excess economic growth, with way too many people living literally too high on the hog. This short article calls our current problems "a dress rehearsal”:
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/one-root-cause-of-pandemics-few-people-think-about/