Wednesday, November 27, 2019


I recently surfed into a policy enacted by the National Park Service at Zion National Park, and I think it’s a darn good one! Having been a National Park Ranger at Zion; visiting the park, especially in summer is NUTS. The Park is beautiful but when you are trying to share it with 10s of thousands of other visitors on any given day the concept of wilderness is sorely diminished.

The Prohibition of tripods or any other multi-legged stabilization device including easels on trails by Guided Photography/Painting Workshops is a fine idea, in addition the use of models/props in Photography/Painting Workshops is not authorized.

I know that the Park is a public space but having a fee based private company clog the trails impacts one’s sense of trying to be one with nature.

To the best of my knowledge the Organic Act of 1916 that created The National Park Service doesn't give anyone the right to monopolize the Park for their personal commercial gain to the detriment of others.

I realize that these comments have taken me off many Christmas card lists but so be it. I would rather opt to see a fourth-grader come around the corner and see nature instead of tripods and easels.

I use fourth-grade students because every year, beginning September 1, all kids in the fourth grade have access to their own Every Kid in a Park pass. This pass provides free access to national parks across the country. The pass covers entrance to Fish and Wildlife Service and National Park Service sites that charge Entrance Fees, and Standard Amenity Fees at Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of Reclamation and US Army Corps of Engineers sites. It admits the pass owner and any accompanying passengers in a private non-commercial vehicle at a per vehicle fee area, or the pass owner and up to 3 adults at sites that charge per person.

So with apologies to the TV show “The Price is Right”…all 10-year old’s “...come on down…”!

A final thought;

It’s interesting to puzzle over the idea that fee based private companies, for their personal gain wanted access to the Park with their discounted government pass. If your there to make money, then pay the prescribed rate for commercial entry.


“…Annual or Lifetime passes will NOT be valid for commercial entry into the park beginning October 1, 2019….”