Cribbed from supertopo.com
********************************
Yosemite News Release
January 29, 2010
For Immediate Release
Media Contacts:
Scott Gediman 209-372-0248
Kari Cobb 209-372-0529
Yosemite National Park Announces Interim Program for
Half Dome Day Use Permits to Address Visitor Safety
Program to begin May 2010
Hiking to the top of Half Dome is one of the most popular hikes in
Yosemite National Park. The iconic granite monolith, at 8,842 feet
above sea level, attracts people from all over the world who attempt to
climb to the summit. Most visitors ascend Half Dome via the cables,
which are in place from mid-May through mid-October.
Approximately 84,000 people climbed to the top of Half Dome in 2008.
Although there are several trailheads leading to the cables on Half
Dome, the majority of visitors start their hike at the Happy Isles
Trailhead in Yosemite Valley.
The increase in popularity of the hike has resulted in large numbers of
visitors using the cables, particularly on weekends and holidays.
During last summer, Saturdays and holidays averaged 840 visitors per
day. On peak days, visitor numbers were estimated at 1100 to 1200.
This increase has resulted in significant safety concerns.
Specifically, there was both a visitor fatality and a visitor who
sustained serious injuries on the cables during two consecutive crowded
weekends last summer. This increase in use has also impacted the
resources and has negatively affected the visitor experience. For
example, visitors have had to wait up to an hour to ascend the cables on
a busy day.
In an effort to address these issues, the park will institute an interim
program that will require a Day Use Permit to hike the cables on Half
Dome on Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays starting in May,
2010. Four hundred permits will be issued per day, 300 of these will be
Day Use Permits and 100 will be included in wilderness permits. These
permits are required for the use of the trail from the base of the
Subdome to the summit of Half Dome and include the Half Dome cable
route.
The Half Dome Day Use Permits will be available starting March 1, 2010
through www.recreation.gov or by calling 1-877-444-6777. Each person
climbing the Half Dome cables will be required to have their own permit.
Up to four permits may be obtained under one reservation. The permits
are free, however, there is a non-refundable $1.50 service charge for
each permit obtained.
During this interim program, visitor use and impacts to the park will be
monitored. Yosemite National Park Rangers will be studying visitor use
and safety, assessing the visitor experience, and compiling data that
will be analyzed by park managers. At this point, the interim program
will be in effect for the 2010 visitor season, as well as the 2011
visitor season. An Environmental Assessment process for a long-term
plan for the Half Dome Cables will begin public scoping in spring 2010.
It's your lead. Chop, chop.