Sierra Wave Media

Eastern Sierra News for November 29, 2024

 

 

 

 

Death Valley National Park sign 2

Death Valley National Park Entrance Sign

DEATH VALLEY, CA – About 820,000 people visited Death Valley National Park in 2020. This was about half the number of people that visited the park the previous year. Breaking down the figures by season illustrates the impact of the coronavirus pandemic over time.

Winter: The year started out strong. The park had its third-busiest January, with 99,000 visits. The park nearly tied its busiest February, with 128,000 visits.

Spring: The pandemic’s impact on travel started mid-way through March, which is usually the park’s busiest month. 112,000 people visited in 2020, down 37% percent from March 2019.

Most of the park closed on April 4, limiting visitation to through-traffic on two major roads. Visitation dropped by 90%, with 18,000 visitors in April and 20,000 in May.

Death Valley Sign DEV 1461

Death Valley National Park, California, CA, USA – Roadside Sign welcoming Travelers

Summer: Most of the park reopened on June 26. In a normal year, the majority of the park’s summer visitors are international travelers. With international travel greatly reduced, the park’s summer visitation was very low, about 30,000 to 40,000 people per month in June, July, August, and September. These figures were about 75% lower than the same months in 2019.

Fall: As the weather started to cool down, Americans resumed traveling to Death Valley. 67,000 people visited in October, down 52% from the previous year. As temperatures cooled even more, November 2020 was a tie for the park’s busiest November, with 132,000 visits.

Campgrounds and lodging in the park closed on December 7 in response to California’s Regional Stay-at-Home Orders. In spite of the lack of overnight accommodations, 94,000 people visited in December, which was the park’s third-busiest December. 

2021: The Regional Stay-at-Home Orders were in effect until late January, yet visitation remained high, with 80,000 visits.

Sheep in masks 4

Masks are required when social distancing cannot be maintained.

Campgrounds and lodging in the park are now back open, and interest is high. Reservations are fully booked for the remainder of the season at Furnace Creek, the park’s only campground with a reservation system. Other campgrounds are available on a first-come, first-served basis.

As Americans seek safe places to recreate during the coronavirus pandemic, many are turning to national parks like Death Valley. Trails, overlooks and open spaces can provide safe ways for visitors to recreate responsibly, get some fresh air and stay active.

To protect the health of those who work in or visit America’s national parks, face masks are required in all National Park Service buildings and facilities. Masks are also required on federally managed lands when physical distancing cannot be maintained, including narrow or busy trails, overlooks, and parking lots.

-www.nps.gov/deva-

 Death Valley National Park is the homeland of the Timbisha Shoshone and preserves natural resources, cultural resources, exceptional wilderness, scenery, and learning experiences within the nation’s largest conserved desert landscape and some of the most extreme climate and topographic conditions on the planet. Learn more at www.nps.gov/deva.


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