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| US National Park Attendance Declines |
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Would you like to visit one of Americafs awe-inspiring national parks?
Yosemite in California, perhaps, with its soaring cliffs and cascading waterfalls?
Or something warmer as fall turns into winter here in the northern hemisphere, such as Floridafs Everglades swamp or a southern battlefield site from the U.S. Civil War?
Youfll certainly be welcome, because so far this year, visitation to the nationfs 395 national parks and historic sites is down about five percent from last year, when park attendance declined 7.5 percent from the year before.
National Park Service officials are a bit perplexed by this, since park visitation usually rises in tough economic times.
It's cheaper than many other vacation options.
But the prolonged length of the economic downturn and continued high gasoline prices have taken their toll.
Donft forget, a lot of visitors who stay in park campgrounds arrive in large campers and recreational vehicles, which are notorious gas guzzlers.
It has also been two years since Ken Burns piqued interest in the national parks with an acclaimed documentary film about their history and beauty.
And although therefs no way to get an actual count, anecdotally park rangers are reporting a considerable drop-off in what is usually one of the strongest segments of park tourism: visitors from Europe, where the strength of the euro against the dollar had made trips to the United States a bargain.
But the eurofs value has fallen vis-a-vis the dollar, and combined with the instability of several economies on the continent, itfs thought that lots of European families that might have checked out the misty hollows of the Great Smoky Mountains or the flaming sunsets over the Grand Canyon stayed closer to home this year.
Ifm Ted Landphair. |
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