Yellowstone road work set for summer season | KULR-8 News, Sports, Weather | – Billings, MontanaLocal Coupons | Wyoming State News


Yellowstone road work set for summer season | KULR-8 News, Sports, Weather | – Billings, MontanaLocal Coupons | Wyoming State News.

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (AP) — Road and parking area improvement projects are scheduled to begin the first week of July in Yellowstone National Park‘s Tower Junction and Canyon Village areas.

But the park says little impact is expected on visitors enjoying the summer season because most of the work will be during the night.

Crews will construct and widen a 2.5-mile stretch of road between Tower Junction and Tower Fall and reconstruct the Canyon Village parking lot.

The Tower Road work will result in closures from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. into September. There could be 30-minute delays during open hours.

The Canyon Village Main Parking Area will be open during the day but closed from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m.

All stores will remain open for business during their normal operating hours.

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Where’s a Yellowstone bear?


Where’s a Yellowstone bear? – IOL Travel North America | IOL.co.za.

For wildlife enthusiasts hoping to catch a glimpse of wolves, grizzly bears and bison at Yellowstone National Park, the best place to be on the lookout may soon be a cellphone.

New smartphone apps enable people to pinpoint where they’ve recently seen critters in Yellowstone. People who drive to those locations can – at least in theory – improve their odds of seeing wildlife compared to the typical tourist’s dumb luck.

One app called Where’s a Bear promises “up to the second” animal sightings in Yellowstone. Recently a website called Yellowstone Wildlife began offering a similar app.

Websites long have kept track of animal sightings in Yellowstone. Already this spring the Yellowstone Wildlife site shows signs of life: Mule deer near park headquarters at Mammoth, bison in the area of a landmark petrified tree.

A message on the site warns of grizzlies feeding on a bison carcass near the Yellowstone River Trail. The statement relayed from the National Park Service could save a life. Grizzly attacks killed two tourists in Yellowstone last summer.

But not everybody thinks that making a lot of wildlife sighting information readily retrievable by phone is a hot idea. As it is, the crowds that stop to gawk at roadside wildlife in Yellowstone can grow to hundreds of people, pointed out Vicky Kraft, of Pine Mountain, California, who maintains a Facebook group for Yellowstone.

Grizzlies are especially challenging for park rangers who have to both direct traffic and keep people a safe distance away.

“It’s crazy. There’s no parking. People sideswipe each other because they’re looking at the bear,” Kraft said Monday.

Wildlife becoming too comfortable around people is another concern. A grizzly habituated to people is even more dangerous than your average bear.

“I think there’s a responsibility that a person should have if they really like Yellowstone to say, ‘Gee, is this going to be bad for the animals? Is it bad for the ranger? Is it bad for the park?’ And I think when you look at a situation with that app, the answer would have to be yes,” Kraft said.- Sapa-AP

Entry is free this week at national parks


Entry is free this week at national parks; fire management officer also named | Visalia Times-Delta and Tulare Advance-Register | visaliatimesdelta.com.

National Park Week, which offers free entrance to 397 parks throughout the United States, will continue until Sunday.

For 10 days each year, park visitors throughout the nation can enjoy everything the parks have to offer for free.

Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks spokeswoman Dana Dierkes said visitors should log on to the parks’ website or read the parks’ newspaper, which includes information about ranger-led programs.

ÔªøIn other news, David Allen has been named the parks’ fire management officer.

Allen, who has a degree in biology from the University of California, Berkeley, has worked as Sequoia National Park district fire management officer and aviation manager for last 12 years.

His previous experience includes working at Yellowstone National Park with a helitack crew, Yosemite National Park as the prescribed fire specialist and at Indiana Dunes National Park as the fire management officer.

“Dave brings a tremendous amount of knowledge and experience to this position,” Chief Ranger Kevin Hendricks said.

“His performance here in the parks, as well as in a number of other prior jobs and assignments, has shown his ability to lead and direct a complex program,” he added.

Allen said he has grown to understand the issues of fire management in the Sierra Nevada during his tenure here.

“Managing a highly fire-adapted and fire-prone area such as these parks is a challenge I look forward to,” he said.