For people in the Puget Sound region, persevering through dark winter months often means clinging to the idea that summer will be full of outdoor adventure. But this year, as the coronavirus pandemic became increasingly lethal, trails closed and activities like hiking, climbing and camping — which sometimes require months or years of planning — disappeared from people’s schedules in less time than it takes to pitch a tent.

Over the past two months, however, research and expert opinion suggests that it’s harder for the coronavirus to be transmitted between people in well-ventilated, outdoor areas. Coinciding with this, some state and municipal recreation areas have reopened for public use. As of June 22, 90 percent of Washington State Parks’ campsites, cabins and yurts are open (excluding group camps). Three parks with campgrounds are open in King County.

“We were glad to have camping reopen, but recognized that we needed to take precautions to ensure both the safety of our staff and visitors,” says Ed Girard, operations manager of the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission, which manages the state’s 124 parks and their campgrounds. “The public seems hungry to get out and camp, [but] reopening a 124-park system across the state in nearly every county is complex. It takes time to get things up and moving again.”

With many recreational activities off-limits because of the shutdown, day trips to Washington’s wild spaces exploded in popularity as alternatives. In response, a Washington-based coalition of land managers and outdoor advocacy groups called the Recreate Responsibly Coalition developed a set of ethical adventuring tenets that have since gained national support from federal agencies like the U.S. Forest Service.

But overnight camping is another beast. For Puget Sound’s outdoor enthusiasts, camping invites longer stationary periods in proximity to others, shared facilities, and a greater opportunity to pass the virus between counties. As camping is allowed in more places, it can create anxiety and concern.

Molly Wilmoth of Olympia has yet to camp this summer, opting for hiking and trail running instead. She started out slightly anxious about those activities, but her confidence and comfort grew once she hit the trail and saw people mask-up when passing. But with a furlough creating three-day weekends for her over the next few months, Wilmoth is planning several trips throughout the Pacific Northwest with conscientious partners.

She said they’re “people that believe in wearing masks and making choices that help protect those who are more vulnerable to this pandemic. I want to ensure people in other communities are safe. If infection rates continue climbing and no-contact trips seem too risky to communities or ourselves, we will stop.”

In considering ways she might camp most safely, she picked trips with minimal engagement in small towns that could be hit hard by COVID-19 — though she may stay closer to home, depending on how the virus trends in those towns.

“Overall, people are very respectful of others and follow the basic personal protective guidelines,” Girard says.

Dr. Nandita Mani, an allergy and infectious diseases fellow with UW Medicine and self-described outdoor-adventure enthusiast, says that while camping is certainly lower on the list of risky recreational activities, any social activity with individuals outside your household carries some risk of transmission. That can be compounded if people engage in other social activities throughout the week.

“I haven’t gone camping yet this summer, but I understand the urge to get outside and recreate, and I do think that it’s likely safer than other ways of vacationing, because you’re outdoors all day,” she says.

Before Seattleite Amy Bonaduce arrived at Vasa Resort on Lake Sammamish in Bellevue for RV camping with her husband, radio and television personality Danny Bonaduce, she was anxious for reasons beyond the pandemic. Amy hadn’t camped in 30 years, as she notes on her blog, but she was eager to get out of the house after months of social distancing. She brought plenty of towels, linens, utensils, and food.

“I felt like a doomsday prepper,” she writes.

She also brought protective gear like disinfecting spray, wipes, gloves and masks. Bonaduce thoroughly wiped down the interior of her rental RV, even though she’d been assured it had been disinfected.

She soon settled into the uncrowded campground and focused on appreciating waterfront views. Her fellow campers — fewer than 10 families — kept their distance, and because the park was only open to self-sustaining campers, they didn’t have to share facilities. “I would not feel comfortable with shared Bathrooms and showers or crowded beaches,” she says.

Seattleite Elliot Kulakow and his wife visited Oregon’s Umatilla National Forest in late March for two nights and Gifford-Pinchot National Forest in late May for one night. He wasn’t nervous about the virus.

“I still think the ban on camping, and anti-camping propaganda, was  stupid,” he says. “Closing facilities kind of makes sense, but we clearly know now there is almost no risk to socially-distant outdoor activities. Closing access only makes sense for vulnerable native communities, where it may actually be possible to keep the virus at bay, which is not true of almost everywhere. Reactionary and trigger-happy locals have always been the only real threat.”

Tara Austen Weaver, a Seattle author and ex-outdoor education instructor, usually spends her summers camping. But she plans to avoid it entirely this year, even though it’s allowed in certain areas of the state. She cited concerns about how the virus is trending locally; King County’s move to Phase 2 made her only more concerned.

“I think once you start reading some of the first-person accounts of what this thing can really be like, it kind of scares you straight,” she says.

Her biggest concern about visiting a campground is the established risk of coronavirus in bathrooms, like transmission through aerosolized fecal matter during toilet flushes.

“Do I want to go and sanitize every bathroom I use? Do I want to worry?” she says. “At a certain point, it just becomes more stressful than pleasurable. I’d actually be more inclined to go backpacking this summer than camping in a campground.”

As the virus persists and if she’s still cooped up in August, Weaver says she might have ways to get her “nature fix,” including begging friends to open up private wildland they own on the Olympic Peninsula. But she says the greater good trumps her desire.

“Everything we do has a certain level of risk, and we in the U.S. do not come from a culture of community concern,” she says. “I see a lot of people saying, ‘My family is comfortable with this level of risk.’ But you’re not just risking your own family. You’re risking other people — from the people who might be in the campsite next to you, to your neighbors, to medical providers. I love being out in the wilderness. If I have to give all of that up for this year in order to keep people safer, then I’ve come to peace with that.”

 

Written by Hannah Weinberger. Reprinted with permission of Crosscut (crosscut.com), a non-profit news site.

The mountain is back

The coronavirus curtain has been lifted at Mount Rainier National Park, in time for visitors to enjoy its best weather months of the year.
In June, Nisqually to Paradise Road in the park’s southwest corner reopened, granting public access to the popular Longmire and Paradise recreation areas. Access to hiking and picnicking also increased for the park’s east side near the White River and Ohanapecosh campgrounds.
Certain activities and the use of some facilities remained limited, however. Park officials said overnight use of campgrounds will reopen in stages, with some sites available at the Cougar Rock and Ohanapecosh campgrounds. Restrictions on restrooms and trailheads also were in place, and visitor centers and in-park lodging would remain closed until it is safe to reopen them. Climbing and other recreation at higher elevations of the mountain (above 10,500 feet) were scheduled to reopen on June 19 and expand during the summer based as coronavirus risks and park staffing allowed.
Updates about the park, what’s open, and guidelines for visitors are available at nps.gov/mora, 360-569-6575, and on Facebook and other social media sites.
The National Park Service is following guidance from the national Centers for Disease Control and state and local public health authorities when making decisions on public access and activities.
Mount Rainier’s backcountry became accessible in June for non-group hiking and winter recreation. Self-registration for wilderness permits is required at park entrances.
Park roads that were open in June included Nisqually to Paradise, Westside, State Route 123 to Cayuse Pass, StateRoute 410 to Chinook Pass, White River, and Stevens Canyon. (Stevens Canyon was open from the west to the Bench and Snow Lakes Trail, with access to Reflection Lakes; Grove of the Patriarchs Trail is accessible from the east).

Trails like the ones at Paradise are among the amenities open to visitors at Mount Rainier National Park.
Metro’s transit-to-trails rides catching on

Passengers with a passion for hiking boarded Trailhead Direct for more than 17,500 hikes in 2019 in the second season of the two-year pilot project co-led by King County Metro and King County Parks, a 75 percent increase from 2018.

The transit-to-trails service added a fourth route this season starting at the Tukwila International Boulevard Station. Ridership from Sound Transit’s Capitol Hill Link light rail station to Mount Si more than doubled, officials reported.

Trailhead Direct started with a single-route feasibility test in 2017 in response to dangerous overcrowding and illegal parking at popular trailheads. Metro and parks officials launched a two-year pilot project in 2018 with additional funding from the voter-approved Seattle Transportation Benefit District. REI Co-op and Cliff Bar and Company helped fund outreach and promotion.

Metro and the Parks Department are considering options for continuing the service next season, which will likely require a similar public-private partnership.

Hikers board one of Metro’s Trailhead Direct vehicles for a ride to Mount Si and other trail destinations in King County.

Traveling in the Puget Sound area, the Pacific Northwest and faraway has unique challenges during the coronavirus outbreak, but what’s true now and in the future is that there’s nothing like travel to keep you active and engaged, and also that traveling safely takes careful planning.
With that in mind, “Safe Travels for Seniors”–a free, information-only webinar—will be hosted in May be AAA Travel and Pierce County Aging and Disability Resources. The one-hour presentation will include advice on planning and all that needs to be done to make ab adventure a safe one.
The sessions will be offered three times–May 19 at 6:30 p.m., May 28 at 10:30 a.m., and May 29 at 12 p.m. Participation is online or by telephone:
• Via computer, tablet, or other smart device, log in at https://zoom.us/j/93816125490?pwd=aXg5UWhzSFZVZWFRUUZoR1Z2eTFmQT09 (password: 798).
• By phone, call 1-253-215-8782 or 877-853-5247 (toll-free) or 888-788-0099 (toll-free) and use webinar ID 938 1612 5490.
The webinar will be presented by Gala Payne, general manager of travel and member services at the Tacoma office of AAA. No products or services will be sold.
Opportunities for travel abound. Organized travel lets someone else to do all the research and planning. Individual travel allows self-guided exploration and spur-of-the-moment decisions. Either way, safety is the number one priority, said Aaron Van Valkenburg, manager of Aging and Disability Resources, a county government program.