With the last big travel weekend of the summer arriving, some nervous tourists are keeping an eye on the huge Sierra Nevada wildfire, wondering whether it will interfere with their travel plans to destinations like Yosemite National Park and Lake Tahoe.
Those who keep their hard-to-get Labor Day lodging reservations in Yosemite will enjoy a pleasant surprise: stunning views of the towering granite icons Half Dome and El Capitan with less of the usual holiday congestion.
The park has seen some reservation cancellations and some nearby mountain communities have had a serious drop-off in business due to the 315-square-mile Rim Fire, which was 32 percent contained Friday morning. More than 20,000 acres of the fire are along the northern edge of the national park.
But 20 miles upwind in Yosemite Valley, the sky is clear and not even the scent of smoke is in the air.
Park officials expect about 3,000 cars a day to pass through gates this weekend instead of the nearly 5,000 that might typically show on the holiday. Most of the missing will be day tourists, not folks who have waited months and even years for a campsite along the Merced River or a room at the historic Ahwahnee Lodge.
“We’ve had minimal cancellations, and when we do we fill them immediately,” said park spokesman Scott Gediman. “The campsites are full and there are plenty of people, but because of the publicity we’re slower.”
It’s a familiar pattern of panic, cancellation and rebooking in the rugged national park that has been shaped by all manner of disaster. In years past, when boulders tumbling from 3,000-foot granite monoliths have sent tourists scrambling, or when a mouse-borne illness killed tent cabin guests, cancellations poured in.
But the park never has enough lodging for the 4 million tourists who visit annually, so vacant rooms rarely go unfilled for long.
That’s not the case in nearby Groveland, a scenic Gold Rush community along a road that carries 2.2 million cars into the park every year. Early on, fire tore along Highway 120, forcing its closure and cutting off the town’s lifeblood.
Since then, the historic hamlet has been the dateline on scores of ominous news stories describing the inferno that has long since chewed its way north. The notoriety has taken a toll.
“I laid off all my girls” Wednesday, said Laura Jensen, owner of the Firefall Coffee Roasting Co. “This has totally drained us. It’s like winter when we slow down and take care of the locals, but this should be our busiest time of the year.”
The Iron Door Saloon, which calls itself the oldest in California, also laid off employees this week, as did the Hotel Charlotte, a 1920s boutique hotel on Main Street.
“I’ve had $20,000 worth of cancellations in the past few days,” said Doug Edwards, who owns the hotel with his wife, Jen. “It’s fear-driven. People don’t want to drive on a road that looks like Hiroshima or Nagasaki.”
Making matters worse for Groveland was Thursday’s fire-forced cancellation of the Strawberry Music Festival, which draws 20,000 bluegrass lovers to town every Labor Day weekend.
“We’re coming into the crescendo of our season,” Edwards said. “Our hotel should be completely full.”
The impact is being felt as far north as Lake Tahoe, where thick smoke settled this week in the alpine basin that draws outdoor enthusiast from around the world, affecting everything from hotel reservations to bicycle rentals.
The sky was clear Thursday, but tourists had yet to come back.
Some hotels and motels at South Lake Tahoe were experiencing as much as a 10 percent to 20 percent drop in business, with less of an impact at larger hotel-casino properties, said Carol Chaplin, executive director Lake Tahoe Visitors Authority. But she said there were signs of improvement as the holiday weekend neared.
“We’ve got blue skies. We’ve got the lake back. It’s the best it has been in a week,” she said.
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