Tag Archives: national park service

National Park Service removes trash cans from parks in an effort to shut down public lands

It’s already started back in D.C.

The National Park Service is REMOVING trash cans from national parks under a new “Trash Free Park” program that’s being instituted in some parks outside of California. According to the Question/Answer sheet found HERE, this is the idea behind the program:

“…Visitors are responsible for removing all refuse they generate in the park when they leave the park. Trash must be picked up and the area left in a clean condition before departure. Visitors are encouraged to come prepared when visiting the park. If they plan to picnic, barbecue, or in any way generate waste, they should plan ahead to provide the means to organize materials needed, and correctly package items and refuse, in order to efficiently remove it with them by the means in which they came -by walking, metro, bicycle, car, etc.. The park encourages visitors to consider how they package items. Using materials that can be recycled or composted when they return home is a positive way to help the environment…”

I don’t know about you, but my questions in no reflect the rainbows and unicorns questions dreamed up but the NPS flunky who wrote that sheet up.  My only question is this:

What fucking moron came up with this idiotic plan?

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National Park Week is April 20th – 28th – Free Park Admission Monday-Friday!

April 20th through the 28th, 2013 is National Park Week!  For National Park Week 2013, get free admission to all National Parks (including your parking fees waived) weekdays from April 22-26.  Check with your local National Park (with 401 national parks, there’s bound to be one near you!) to make sure what the costs are before you jump in the car.  There’s a diclaimer on most sites: “Fee waiver includes: entrance fees, commercial tour fees, and transportation entrance fees. Other fees such as reservation, camping, tours, concession and fees collected by third parties are not included unless stated otherwise.”

National Junior Ranger Day will be held on April 20th, which invites young visitors to “explore, learn and protect” our national parks, and includes being sworn in as a Junior Ranger.

For adults, April 27th is Volunteer Day, where you can help on a variety of national park projects across the nation.

You can find a nearby national park HERE.

To find National Park Week events near you, visit the NPS calendar page HERE.

The National Park Service’s National Park Week website is HERE.

The National Park Foundation (officially recognized charity of America’s National Parks) website is HERE, and their information page on National Park Week is HERE.

Think Outside – Planning Your National Parks Visits

It’s never too late to start planning on turning off the television, shutting down the computer, and getting your butt outside.

The United States National Park Service is the federal agency that manages all of our national parks. The agency was created in August, 1916, through a campaign by Stephen Mather, J. Horace McFarland and journalist Robert Sterling Yard as part of the United States Department of the Interior. It was created through an act of Congress, signed by President Woodrow Wilson, known as the National Park Service Organic Act which mandated that an agency be created “to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and wildlife therein, and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.”

The National Park System has grown from one million acres of wilderness known as Yellowstone National Park back in 1872, to include over 18 million acres in almost 400 national parks today. To quote the National Park Service, we are truly owners of the world’s greatest collection of nature, history and culture through our National Parks System. Continue reading