Current:Home > InvestYellowstone National Park partially reopens after floods -WealthRoots Academy
Yellowstone National Park partially reopens after floods
View
Date:2025-04-16 20:27:46
More than a week after catastrophic floods closed Yellowstone National Park, it partially reopened on Wednesday.
Despite some major roads still being washed out, three of the massive park's five entrances opened this morning, to lines hundreds of cars long.
The traffic was so bad in the adjacent town of West Yellowstone, Mont., that the park let people in a little before the official morning opening time.
But the number of people being allowed in is being limited for now, with hopes that more park roads will open in early July.
For now, cars with license plates that end in even numbers can enter on even numbered days, and odd numbered plates on odd numbered days. If that doesn't work out, the park said it will try a reservation system.
Park Superintendent Cam Sholly has said half the park can't handle all of the visitors.
People in line at West Yellowstone were excited and grateful to go in the park, but also disappointed that they were going to be spending a lot less time in the park than they had planned.
"We started out with a tour group and we were supposed to come to Yellowstone and stay in Yellowstone — it was closed," said New Jersey resident Pat Sparacio.
"But, we left the group," she said. "They went to Salt Lake City. We rented a car with an even number and we got here."
Yellowstone typically sees close to a million visitors a month in the summer. For now, only about two-thirds of the park is open. In the figure-eight of the park's 400-mile road system, only the southern loop is drivable. The northern loop on top could open as soon as early July, park officials said. That would open up about 80% of the whole park.
But even after the northern road loop is open to cars again, Yellowstone's two northernmost entrances are expected to remain closed all summer, or open to only very limited traffic.
That means the towns adjacent to them, Gardiner and Cooke City, Mont., have become virtual dead ends, when, in a normal summer, they're gateways serving hundreds of thousands of summer travelers.
Economic losses will affect several Montana towns on northern routes into the park, many of which are dealing with extensive flood damage of their own. Some of the state's biggest cities, like Billings and Bozeman, also see a significant number of Yellowstone visitors fly into their airports.
The northern towns' losses are potentially gains for gateway towns adjacent to the three entrances that reopened.
Rachel Spence, a manager at Freeheel and Wheel bike shop in West Yellowstone, said there appear to be local benefits to the limited entry by license plate system. In the first fifteen minutes they were open on Wednesday, two families rented bikes who had odd-numbered license plates and couldn't enter the park.
"We're hopeful that more people will use that opportunity to explore things in town like the Grizzly and Wolf Discovery Center, the museum, our local trails that are outside," Spence said. "We're hopeful that this will maybe allow people to see that there's more to do in West Yellowstone than the park itself."
veryGood! (165)
Related
- 'Most Whopper
- Carmelo Anthony Announces Retirement From NBA After 19 Seasons
- Some adults can now get a second shot of the bivalent COVID-19 vaccine
- This Week in Clean Economy: China Is Leading the Race for Clean Energy Jobs
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Music program aims to increase diversity in college music departments
- Judge's ruling undercuts U.S. health law's preventive care
- Where gender-affirming care for youth is banned, intersex surgery may be allowed
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- Alaska’s Hottest Month on Record: Melting Sea Ice, Wildfires and Unexpected Die-Offs
Ranking
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- A Young Farmer Confronts Climate Change—and a Pandemic
- 6 teenagers injured in Milwaukee shooting following Juneteenth festivities
- 146 dogs found dead in home of Ohio dog shelter's founding operator
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- 'I am hearing anti-aircraft fire,' says a doctor in Sudan as he depicts medical crisis
- Alana Honey Boo Boo Thompson Graduates From High School and Mama June Couldn't Be Prouder
- This Week in Clean Economy: West Coast ‘Green’ Jobs Data Shows Promise
Recommendation
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Transcript: Former Attorney General William Barr on Face the Nation, June 18, 2023
Court Lets Exxon Off Hook for Pipeline Spill in Arkansas Neighborhood
Pope Francis will be discharged from the hospital on Saturday
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
1 dead, at least 18 injured after tornado hits central Mississippi town
Dorian One of Strongest, Longest-Lasting Hurricanes on Record in the Atlantic
As pandemic emergencies end, some patients with long COVID feel 'swept under the rug'