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Outdoor & National Park News

January 2008 - Posts

  • Two new national park pages go live

    Adventure-Crew posts two new parks on their US Navigation Map. Cedar Breaks and Rainbow Bridge can now be found on the Utah map.

     

    Click here to view

     

     

  • Old Faithful Live Webcam

    This was pretty cool and easy to use. You just need to go to the NPS site and click on Yellowstone and then Webcams. You’ll find a few video tours and the Old Faithful webcam. I was fortunate to see a wolf and Old Faithful erupt within 5 or 10 minutes. It erupts about every 90 minutes, but you will not know when it has last erupted when you click on the link. There is a tutorial about the Geyser area that plays as you watch. The picture is a little fuzzy at times, my husband says they need to take the auto focus off and clean the lens, but all-in-all, it was pretty cool as I’ve said.

     

    Webcam article

     

  • National parks being looted, items ending up for sale

    What a shame that people can’t leave artifacts alone so all people can enjoy them where they won’t be destroyed by improper handling. Please do what you can to ensure that America’s history is preserved by reporting anyone who you see take things that do not belong to them to a park ranger. I have always loved archeology and have always enjoyed looking at artifacts that have been recovered, but would never contemplate pilfering from a national park or any other area that belongs to someone else.  Corie Marks

    USA Today

    Jan. 23, 2008 04:32 PM

    Looting of archaeological artifacts and fossils from national parks is increasing as the demand for such items rises on the Internet and the world market, U.S. National Park Service officials say.

    About 340 looting incidents considered "significant" are reported each year at the 391 national parks, monuments, historic sites and battlefields - probably less than 25 percent of the actual number of violations, says National Park Service staff ranger Greg Lawler. "The trends are up," he says.

    "The theft of archaeological and paleontological resources is a chronic problem that we simply have not even been able to get a grasp on," says Mark Gorman, chief ranger at South Dakota's Badlands National Park. "There's just insufficient resources."

    Park service investigators search Web sites for looted artifacts and the FBI helps track items, some of which make their way to collectors in Europe and Asia. Prices are increasing for some items, including Native American pottery and garments, says Bonnie Magness-Gardiner, manager of the FBI's art theft program.

    The most coveted items can cost "in the tens of thousands, sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars," she says. Thieves caught last year at Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park sold a Confederate belt buckle for $3,300 and buttons for $200 each.

    The park service has 1,500 law enforcement rangers and 400 seasonal rangers - one for about every 56,000 acres. "We really don't have enough manpower," Lawler says.

    That can make it difficult to catch criminals such as the three men who dug 460 holes at the Fredericksburg-Spotsylvania military park in search of artifacts and the man who pleaded guilty to taking 252 relics last year from Colorado's Mesa Verde National Park.

    Under the 1979 Archaeological Resources Protection Act, first-time felony offenders can be fined up to $20,000 and imprisoned for a year.

    Todd Swain, a National Park Service special agent, says the problem is far worse than statistics show. In a report he wrote for the 2007 "Yearbook of Cultural Property Law " he concluded, "The true scope of the looting problem is staggering. ... Our shared cultural heritage is disappearing before our eyes."

     

  • On the road...; "Utah: The National Park State"

    This is a great article about what’s in Utah. The author doesn’t mention it, but there are several other National Parks Service areas in the form of monuments, historic sites and recreation areas. It truly is a great place to begin your tour of the national parks! Corie Marks

     

    With five national parks, Utah is America's national parks capital. Utah also claims the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park as its own, since it is best accessed through southern Utah.

    Utah's national parks are located close together, allowing visitors to experience them all in one trip. Whether you choose to visit just one or two, or to take a Grand Circle swing through them all, your trip is certain to be unforgettable!

    Within these parks, you'll find some of the most photographed landscapes, such as Delicate Arch, Utah's scenic red rock icon. With a visit to Monument Valley, you'll be surrounded by the setting for more Western movies than any other site in the United States. You can also learn about Native American culture as you explore its unique sandstone formations.

    While Utah's parks are considered national treasures, there are many more places to see and things to do. For example, Utah is full of Mormon historic and cultural sites that have fascinated and inspired visitors for more than 150 years.

    In 1847, the first party of Mormon emigrants, led by Brigham Young, reached the Salt Lake Valley. The story of the thousand-mile Mormon exodus from the mid-west to Salt Lake has become well known as a tale of remarkable hard work, faith, and dedication. Upon reaching Utah, these settlers prospered in a place many thought too arid and dry to support modern civilization.

    Fortunately, these pioneers created a rich heritage that gives tourists insight into Mormon culture. In Temple Square, Utah's most popular tourist destination in Salt Lake City, visitors can explore nearly 20 attractions related to Mormon pioneer history and genealogy, all within three city blocks.

    These sites include the Salt Lake Temple, constructed in a neo-gothic style over the course of an astounding 40-year period between 1853 and 1893. At the Tabernacle, home to the famous Mormon Tabernacle Choir, you'll see its famous organ containing 11,623 pipes, making it one of the largest and richest-sounding organs in the world. And at the Family History Library, you can take time to explore your family's history, with access to the world's largest collection of genealogical resources.  

     

    Whichever park you visit, or site you explore, you're sure to discover the natural beauty and rich history of Utah, creating a truly memorable holiday.

     

    By Bryan, Julia

     

    Julia Bryan handles communications and public relations for DeNure Tours in Lindsay.
  • New, high-tech fuel cells kick in at Cuyahoga Valley National Park

     Acumentrics' new system kicked in during a power outage that lasted more than 24 hours recently. The new technology is proving extremely realiable and efficient.

    Read the Business Wire story here.

  • Cyclorama, museum to magnify spirit of Gettysburg park

    All I can say about the below article is “Wow!” I can’t wait to see this park and would think that any Civil War history buff would be excited about this addition to the park and seeing this historical painting restored and hung properly for the first time in history.   Corie Marks, staff writer

     

    Sunday, January 13, 2008By Tom Barnes, Post-Gazette Harrisburg Bureau

    GETTYSBURG -- A visit to the 6,000-acre Gettysburg National Military Park, where 51,000 Union and Confederate soldiers were killed, wounded, captured or missing in three days of fierce fighting in July 1863, has always been a moving experience.

    But trips to this hallowed ground, considered the turning point of the Civil War, will soon get even better for the nearly 2 million sightseers, tourists and history buffs that stop here each year.

    Two major improvements are almost completed after two years of work. In early April, a new $103 million museum and visitors center will open. Then in late September, the famous Cyclorama -- a 360-degree, 42-foot-high painting depicting the bloody but unsuccessful charge led by Confederate Gen. George Pickett -- will be back on public display after an extensive restoration.

    The centerpiece of the visitor center is a tall, 10-sided structure clad in red insulated metal, somewhat resembling a big barn. Other sections of the visitor’s center also stick with the rural agricultural look, with a gray stone exterior, common to many old farmhouses in south-central Pennsylvania.

    The "barn" will contain the two most important features for visitors: a new museum, with 11 separate galleries outlining the events that led up to the Battle of Gettysburg and detailing each of the three days of bloody fighting, and a 35-foot-high escalator leading up to a circular platform from which visitors can view the Cyclorama.

    The new center is two-thirds of a mile from an old house that has served as the welcome center since 1972. The current welcome center can accommodate about 400,000 people per year, while Gettysburg visitation has grown far beyond that.

    The new center will open by April 15, with the exact date to be announced soon, said Dru Neil, a spokeswoman for the Gettysburg Foundation, a nonprofit group helping the National Park Service oversee the project's construction.

    The Gettysburg Foundation is raising $125 million for the project to build and maintain the new museum and visitor’s center and rehabilitate the painting. The funds include $20 million from the state, $15 million from the federal government and the rest private.

    The new museum should be popular with Civil War junkies because it will have 11 historical galleries, each one named after phrases spoken by President Abraham Lincoln in his famous Gettysburg Address of November 1863.

    Different galleries will have pictures and documents of the years leading up to the Civil War. One will focus on the Civil War from 1861 to 1863. Its title will be Mr. Lincoln's words of "Now we are engaged in a great civil war."

    Another gallery will focus solely on battle, titled, "Now we are met on a great battlefield of that war." It will have information on the day before the battle started, with additional galleries detailing each of the three days of the battle.

    The last gallery, called "Never forget what they did here," will outline ongoing efforts to preserve the battlefield.

    The architects for the new museum and visitor’s center were LSC Design of York. They thought the design should reflect the Pennsylvania farmland and agricultural buildings, said Ms. Neil.

    The new center will also be filled with important historical artifacts, such as a portable wooden desk believed to have been used by Confederate commander Gen. Robert E. Lee during the battle, and a journal used by Adams County physician Dr. John O'Neal to identity the locations of several thousand dead Confederate soldiers.

    There are also two theaters where re-created movies of the battle will be shown, an education center for youth groups, a food court, a bookstore and museum shop and an area for unloading the dozens of buses filled with schoolchildren who arrive here.

    The date for the Cyclorama unveiling has already been set: Sept. 26. Visitors and tourists once again will be able to view the panoramic painting portraying one of the most famous battles ever fought on American soil, Pickett's Charge. The painting has been out of public display for the past two years, undergoing a $15 million restoration.

    The Cyclorama, painted in 1883-84 by French artist Paul Philippoteaux, shows the intense fighting between the North and South on July 3, 1863, as Confederate soldiers under Pickett's command made a last, desperate gasp for victory before being forced to retreat south the next day.

    The Cyclorama consists of 14 separate panels, which are 42 feet high. The painting would be 377 feet long if stretched out in a straight line.

    Before being taken down for restoration, the Cyclorama had hung for 40 years in a building near the current visitor’s center. Its corkscrew-shaped interior staircase led visitors up to a platform where the painting could be viewed.

    However, Ms. Neil said, the painting wasn't hung properly, which prevented visitors from seeing it at a proper sight line. The improper hanging also added to the deterioration of the canvas.

    Also, in the old configuration, there were portions of the sky missing, which made the painting not as tall as it should have been. These portions of sky and clouds will be restored before the painting is on view again in September.

    The condition of the canvas had greatly suffered over the years, said David Olin, of Olin Conservation Inc., who is overseeing the restoration.

    Decades ago, the original 14 panels were chopped into 32 smaller pieces. As a result the painting "was not able to hang properly," Mr. Olin said. In the early part of the 20th century, the painting was "rolled up and cut and stored in various places," causing damage to the paint and the canvas. "We had to mend torn and rotted sections of canvas."

    There had been three previous restoration efforts, but the current one started in November 2003. Once the painting returns to public view, it will be the first time in more than 100 years that it will be displayed in its original curved, or "hyperbolic," shape, he said.

    "We will put visitors back into the time of the battle," said Mr. Olin. "People will get a sense of 'wow.' People need to allow themselves to interact with the painting."

    The long escalator will bring tourists up to and down from a circular platform, positioned in the middle of the painting.

    The Gettysburg Cyclorama is one of only about a dozen such massive circular paintings in the world, Mr. Olin added.

    Eventually, the current visitor center and the building that used to house the Cyclorama will be razed and the land will be returned to the way it appeared on July 1-3, 1863.

    Nothing new will be built on the land because "over 900 Union soldiers were killed, wounded or captured during the fighting on the land where the existing visitor’s center is located. We didn't want to further intrude on the ground where those soldiers had died," said Katie Lawhon, spokeswoman for the Gettysburg National Military Park.

    No soldiers died on the land where the new visitor’s center is located, Ms. Neil said.

    Gettysburg Foundation officials are confident that the two new additions will create "a new Gettysburg experience," said Ms. Neil.

    "Our goal, working with the National Park Service, is to ensure that visitors have an inspiring visit. We hope they go away wanting to learn more about what happened here and how important it was in our country's history."

    Bureau Chief Tom Barnes can be reached at tbarnes@post-gazette.com or 717-787-4254.
  • Small avalanche closes Oregon 62 in Crater Lake National Park

     

     

    A small avalanche in Crater Lake National Park has closed a portion of Highway 62. The communication center at the park reported that the slide of snow at about 9:30 a.m. blocked the highway between Highway 230 and Munson Valley Road. Munson Valley Road also was closed.

    Blizzard conditions have enveloped the park, but crews expected to dig out the snow slide this morning.

    A blizzard warning issued by the National Weather Service in Medford for the Southern Oregon Cascades, including Crater Lake, and the Siskiyous predicts continued snow and winds in the mountains today. Between 4 and 10 inches is expected this morning, with another 3 to 6 inches this afternoon. Gusty winds could hit 60 mph at elevations above 5,000 feet.

    Highway 138, West Diamond Lake Highway, has 12 inches of new snow along with trees down, but it is open, Oregon Department of Transportation reported.

    Highway 138, East Diamond Lake Highway, got more than 2 feet of new snow overnight and has trees down and trucks stuck, which have periodically closed the road.

    Between mileposts 3 and 14 the highway is "barely passable," an ODOT report said, noting that crews would be working in the area. 

    Source: The Oregonian January 08, 2008 10:36AM

  • Snowshoe Treks

    Hey everyone that has ever wanted to learn to snowshoe, check out the article about Glacier National Park. This is a great opportunity to see the beautiful winter landscape and learn about the wildlife there.

    Link Here

    You can learn more about Glacier National Park at our website Adventure-Crew.com.

 
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