David Metsky
Well-known member
You know, a *list* would be really useful.
http://www.outdoors.org/lodging/campsites/campsites-profile.cfm
I assume that all are officially closed.
You know, a *list* would be really useful.
http://www.outdoors.org/lodging/campsites/campsites-profile.cfm
I assume that all are officially closed.
...And bizarrely the AMC huts are still open?
Umm... why is that bizarre? Am quite certain the RMC huts are still open. As is the Cog RR, which I'm quite sure is on USFS land above Waumbek station. And isn't Wildcat Ski area still operational? Am quite sure that there many other facilities/services which lease or have permission to use USFS which aren't affected the politics in Washington.
How can a backcountry campsite be closed ? They will send rangers to make sure nobody put their tent down there ?
So why are National Parks different from National Forests? Why are trails closed in one and not the other?
They closed the campgrounds (operated by private concessionaire), why not the huts? Neither involved USFS personnel, and both are located on USFS land.
But really, what does it mean for "backcountry tentsites" to be closed? Which ones? What is "backcountry" in bureaucrateeze?
I can think of at least 2 named "backcountry tentsites" that are entirely unstaffed, and have nearly no amenities. I know of DOZENS of "designated camping areas" in the various Wilderness areas, that have no names and don't even appear on maps. Are these considered "closed"? They're about as backcountry as it gets. Do they consider the free, unimproved roadside tentsites to be "backcountry"?
(Can't speak for the Cog, I don't know if their strip of land is leased, easement, or actually privately owned.)
I'm actually not trying to argue whether anything should or shouldn't be closed, or even really understand the reasoning. I just want a list that I can understand.
Madison Spring hut is listed as open in self-service mode.
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