upper waypoint

Yosemite Bans Wilderness Campfires

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Half Dome, from Glacier Point in Yosemite National Park. (James Chang/Flickr)
Half Dome, from Glacier Point in Yosemite National Park. (James Chang/Flickr)

Yosemite National Park is banning back-country campfires in an attempt to prevent human-caused blazes.

The ban will go into effect for wilderness areas below a 6,000-feet elevation. The National Park Service says that fires are still allowed in designated campgrounds and picnic areas throughout the park.

Park officials, in an announcement released Wednesday, say you can thank three consecutive dry winters for the ban:

Yosemite National Park is implementing fire restrictions due to several years of exceptional drought conditions and high fire danger. The winters of 2011-12, 2012-13, and 2013-14 were all below average precipitation. The Yosemite Region, along with all of California, is in the third year of drought. Conditions are comparable to the major drought of the 1970’s. Due to these conditions, the order is designed to reduce the chances of human caused fires in some of the park’s driest areas. Vegetation throughout the park is drier than at this time last year and increased care and caution are required to protect park resources and ensure visitor and staff safety.

The park is also asking smokers to be extra careful with their cigarette butts and to dispose of them "in the appropriate trash receptacle."

The back-country campfire ban comes amid a spate of Sierra Nevada thunderstorms. Some of those storms, fed by monsoon moisture flowing from the south, have produced occasional heavy rain and prompted flash flood watches and warnings. But many other storm cells roll across the mountains with dry lightning that has a high potential for sparking wildfires.

Sponsored

Officials in Yosemite are acting in part to try to reduce the possibility of a blaze like last year's Rim Fire. That conflagration, the third-biggest wildfire in the state's history, burned more than 250,000 acres — an area nearly nine times the size of San Francisco.

lower waypoint
next waypoint
Stunning Archival Photos of the 1906 Earthquake and FireWhy Nearly 50 California Hospitals Were Forced to End Maternity Ward ServicesCould Protesters Who Shut Down Golden Gate Bridge Be Charged With False Imprisonment?San Francisco Sues Oakland Over Plan to Change Airport NameDemocrats Again Vote Down California Ban on Unhoused EncampmentsFederal Bureau of Prisons Challenges Judge’s Order Delaying Inmate Transfers from FCI DublinFirst Trump Criminal Trial Underway in New YorkJail Deaths Prompt Calls To Separate Coroner And Sheriff's Departments In Riverside CountyDespite Progress, Black Californians Still Face Major Challenges In Closing Equality GapThe Beauty in Finding ‘Other People’s Words’ in Your Own