Stuff You Should Know - Behold, National Parks!
Episode Date: March 8, 2022The National Park system is one of America's great achievements. We'll take you on a journey, from sea to shining sea, in today's episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodc...astnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck and Jerry's here. So the trio put
together makes this Stuff You Should Know. That's right. And there are people working near my house.
So if you hear my dogs today, or construction sounds, I'm sorry.
Well, you know what, Chuck? If we do hear that, we will assume that they are the Olympia Marmot
making some noise, or maybe a gray wolf in Yellowstone after all these years. We're just going
to pretend, okay? Okay, yeah. Got some gray wolves. Yep. Living upstairs, reintroduced.
Into your house. Into my home. Successfully. Yeah, yeah, sure. They've definitely got the local
wildlife on guard. Yeah, we needed a new Apex Predator because Emily was getting tired of it.
I'll bet you. Well, she's a busy business person, I can imagine. She doesn't have time
to be an Apex Predator around the house too. That's right. So, Chuck, we are talking today
about national parks, and it's really appropriate that we're talking about them today,
although it would have been even more appropriate if we had been talking about them
two days ago. Right. But let's just skip that little part. As a matter of fact,
we may even edit it out. I don't want to be a downer this early in the episode, you know?
I agree. What was two days ago? Two days ago was the 150th anniversary of the founding of Yellowstone
as a national park, not just the first national park in America, the first national park in the
entire world. Wowie, wow, wow. Isn't that cool? That is cool, and the date didn't strike me when
I was looking over that stuff. Thanks for the reminder. March 1st, 1872. The reason why I
point out that it was the first one in the world is because there's this writer named Wallace Stegner,
who's known as the Dean of Western Riders, but he said this. He said that national parks are the
best idea we've ever had. Absolutely American, absolutely democratic. They reflect us at our
best rather than our worst, which is, his quote has been kind of picked up. You'll often see
like articles about the national park system as America's best idea. Ken Burns stole it.
Yeah, he did. Well, his hair told him to. It's not entirely his fault. His old hair cut,
which he lost and now looks weird without. And he said, shut up. I'm gonna call it something
else. Ken, stay in line. Yeah, don't make me make you set another fire, Ken. I'll grow over your face.
So it's frequently called America's best idea, not just because it was a good idea and it was
America's idea, but because it was very quickly picked up as we'll see by countries around the
world. And now it's a thing. It's a genuine thing to take land and set it aside and say,
nope, nobody can come do anything with this land. You can't cut the trees down. You can't hunt the
poor beavers off of it. You can't like steal the fish. You can't do anything except come and enjoy
it. And please use the garbage cans when you do come and enjoy it. And that's the point. That's
what national parks are all about. That's right. And thank goodness because this is the United
States, a great country in many ways. But if we had not done this, there would assuredly be a W
hotel sitting in the middle of Sequoia National Forest or on the rim of the Grand Canyon.
Close. A Hilton Garden Inn at the rim of the Grand Canyon. Right. Or quizzically, a Holiday Inn
Express that's nowhere near an airport. You said quizzically. I thought you were about to say a
quiz nose. I was like, yeah, that too. I'd be okay with the quiz nose. So I know that you're not
much of an outdoorsman, but you do like to look at it. I like to be outdoors. I'm just not like
I sit outside. I know about, you know, extracting what I can from nature for my own personal gain.
On the rim of the Grand Canyon, it sounded pretty nice to you, I bet. I met more like
my own prana, my own energy to recharging the old batteries kind of thing. Like I get it. I get it.
I just don't spend as much time outdoors as you. Right. And you know, I've done quite a bit of
traveling through national parks in my life. And especially one summer post college, my best friend
and I took a big two month jaunt around the country, visiting places like Bryce Canyon and Zion and
Arches and Yosemite in the Grand Canyon and White Sands and it's just all as far and wide as we
could go. Basically never hit the Pacific Northwest, but we traveled many a mile. And one of the great
things about national parks is that you can camp wherever you want to. They do have their like
designated camp grounds and things like that, where it's pretty competitive to get spots. But
the great thing is you can just hike in or drive around and find a place to camp. It's called
dispersed camping. And unless there are some specific rule prohibiting that, which there may be,
as long as you follow the rules like no fireworks, no firearms, and sometimes no fires period.
Definitely don't shoot at a pile of fireworks with your firearm. They really frown on it.
Don't do that. But it's great. And it's kind of like one of the great things about national parks
is you can explore and find your own place if you don't like to sort of do, because they can get
very touristy. If you like to go off the beaten path quite literally. Exactly. Dispersed camping.
Of course, there's some bureaucratic term for that. Well, let's talk history, eh? Yeah, let's,
because we covered some of this in our fantastic John Muir episode, which is fantastic and worth
listening to if you haven't heard it. But even before John Muir came along in about the 1850s,
so this is super old-timey. Yosemite seems to have been, and this is taking out Lewis and Clark's
stuff. They apparently passed just north of Yosemite and missed it. But they had all sorts of
like reports and discoveries and all that stuff. We did an episode on that too, also fantastic.
That kind of got the country jazzed back east about what was out west. But apparently if you're
talking about national parks, the real inspiration for them was when a group called the Mariposa
Battalion stumbled into the Yosemite Valley in 1851. That's right. And Yosemite is one of the most
beautiful places on earth. And that's where they were, you know, the job of the Mariposa
Battalion, there's really no other way to say it, was to disperse and ransack Native American
villages and kill them if they wanted to. And just basically lay waste to whatever they saw
and say, this is now ours. And they were doing this, and then they stopped one day and went, holy
cow, look at where we are. Look at this impossibly tall waterfall. Look at these granite cliffs.
Look at these 3,000-year-old giant sequoia trees. You know, can we at least appreciate this for a
moment? And they did. And there was a doctor, a young doctor named Lafayette Bunnell in the
battalion that said, you know what, this place is so amazing. Maybe we should take a break from
ransacking Native American villages and we should name it. Yes. And they really wanted
to punctuate their misunderstanding of Native Americans and the various Native American cultures
they encountered. So they said, well, let's name it what apparently this tribe that were in the
midst of removing from this land is called the Yosemite. And it turns out that tribe was not
at all called the Yosemite. They were the Awaniichi. And the Awaniichi called that place that they
ended up calling Yosemite Awani, meaning gaping mouth-like place. Yosemite means something totally
different, doesn't it? It means they are killers. It makes me wonder if, as they were approaching,
they were just going, Yosemite, Yosemite. And they were like, oh, well, that must be who they are
when in fact they were just calling out like you guys are killers coming for us.
Exactly. Is that really, I mean, that's how to read that, right?
That's how I took it, yes. Oh boy. So that's where the name Yosemite came from. And it's
really, I mean, it's definitely worth saying, you can, we could actually do an entire episode just
on how national parks were part and parcel with Indian reservations in the early 19th century,
or sorry, mid, late 19th century. They were both developed at about the same time. And
they were both kind of developed on the same premise that this is now white settler's land,
and you needed to move. And you should move over here, because now we want this beautiful land
for ourselves to enjoy. So you just can't get around it. It's just part of the history of
national parks. Fortunately, it's really come a long way, and in some cases full circle,
to where now there's a much greater effort among the park service to be like, hey,
you know how you used to live here? Well, we're actually having a lot of trouble managing this
land. Could you come and advise us on this and hopefully get a job doing that kind of thing?
So there's definitely a much greater turning toward, whereas before it was not just a turning
away from, it was turning out. It makes me wonder if there was, has ever been a push
to rename Yosemite Awani National Park, or even Awaniichi, maybe Awani since that's
what they call it. I think that sounds awesome, Awani National Park. I imagine it would meet
the usual resistance when anytime something like that comes up these days. Well, yeah,
it's going to run smack dab into the argument of what about Yosemite Sam? What are you going to do
with him? Let's call him Awani Sam. I guess so. Beautiful park though. This was, you know,
word got around that there's this beautiful place that people can visit and people started
taking people there. Guides started, you know, people that want to go see it. They would
wagon train them up on horseback and get them out there. And then smack dab in the middle of the
Civil War. And, you know, there are a bunch of people along the way that really, like John Muir
is certainly one of them, and Teddy Roosevelt, who we'll cover kind of briefly again. But there
are a lot of people along the way who did some kind of remarkable, made some remarkable moves
that led to ultimately the creation of national parks. And one of them was a senator in California
named, I don't know if it's pronounced cons or conness, it's C-O-N-N-E-S-S. And he introduced a
bill that said, hey, Yosemite is great. Why don't we set aside about a little more than 60 square
miles of this valley for public use? And they said, that's a great idea. So it became the first,
well, I don't know about the first, but it was a state park signed, enshrined by Abraham Lincoln,
not a national park at this point. But the deal was, you can never make this, you can never
just like sell off part of it to private interests. Yeah, there's a lot of argument, pushback on the
idea that Yosemite was the first. Everybody knows Yellowstone was actually the first, but some people
say, no, it wasn't Yosemite or Yellowstone. It was actually Hot Springs National Park in Arkansas
was the first land set aside by the federal government for protection all the way back in
1832. The difference is, it wasn't actually designated as a national park until 1921. So
that's why Hot Springs gets short shrift. Yeah, short shrift.
I just wanted to add a little pedantry to this whole jam.
So Yellowstone, all right, at this point, Yosemite is still state park. Yellowstone, I was about to
say Yellowstone comes along as if someone built it. In September, in fact, September 19th, 1870,
there was an expedition traveling through Montana in what is now Yellowstone National Park.
And they were like, hey, guys, how can we divide up this land? We can make a ton of money of logging
and mining and tourism. And there was one person that stood up. He was an attorney named Cornelius
Hedges and said, gentlemen, I have a different idea. How about we do what they did in Yosemite?
And we make this a state park or set aside this land for public use and somehow did not get murdered
in his sleep. And it would have become a state park probably had it not been for the fact that
Yosemite borders what is now three different states at the time, three different territories,
Wyoming and Montana and Idaho. So who steps in at this point? The feds.
Specifically a president, right? Yeah, Ulysses S. Grant, he signed the Yellowstone Park Protection
Act, little on the nose and not even an acronym. But it works. And this is where the first national
park was established. He said that the headwaters of the Yellowstone River is hereby reserved and
withdrawn from settlement, occupancy or sale and dedicated and set apart as a public park or
pleasuring ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people. And so that was March 1st, 1872,
when he signed that into law and Yellowstone became America and the world's first national park on
record. I think that's a good first stopping point, A. I agree. All right. So we're going to go figure
out what Pleasuring Ground meant to Grant and we'll be right back right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough
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So what's your vote? Pleasure and Ground. That Lake of Whiskey and the Big Rock Candy Mountain
song. That's what I think is Pleasure and Ground. Oh, what a great song. Oh, it's a great song.
I love it. The Bulldogs all have rubber teeth. So Yellowstone is now the first national park in
the United States. And kind of from the beginning, you know, it's funny, like when you look at sort
of the, the loggerheads that environmentalists and certain political parties in this country,
and then certain political idealists in this country all kind of running up against one another,
like it was doing that from the beginning as far as privatization, federalization,
preserving land or not mining and logging and things like that. They've always been arguing
about this stuff. Yeah. And I mean, to be fair, we're like entering a time of like deep American
prosperity, like right at the precipice of the Gilded Age, where like there was this idea that
however you could make money, go make money and make as much as you can, because there are such
things as rags to riches stories all over the place. People would buy books about rags to riches
stories. So there were, and when you couple like that whole impulse that was just kind of socially
acceptable with the idea that there was actually nobody in charge of the national parks at this
time. There's no coherent federal agency charged with overseeing the national parks. Yeah, all
of a sudden you had tons of hucksters showing up and guides who like were locals and are like,
well, I guess I'm going to go be a guide at Yellowstone now and charging whatever they wanted.
And it started to get like, I guess there was a lesson with Niagara Falls, where by the middle
of the 19th century, Niagara Falls was a straight up tourist trap that was very, and this is very
important too, being naturally ruined also by a bunch of energy companies that were using it for
hydroelectric power too, without any regulation whatsoever. And Niagara Falls had to be rescued
from the brink of destruction and put under federal control and regulated, at least state control,
I'm not sure. But it served as like a cautionary tale for places like Yellowstone happily, I guess,
in a weird way. Yeah. And so at the time, it was not, you know, ultimately, as we'll learn,
all of this ended up under the purview of the Department of Interior, but not at this point.
The government did try the privatization route at first, and said, all right, there's a firm
called the Yellowstone, or they name themselves this, the Yellowstone Park Improvement Company.
And we're going to, they're going to get the contract, they're going to run this place.
They can manage the tourist spots, they can harvest and hunt as they see fit. And, you know,
like you said, everyone was really worried that it was going to get out of control. And
another gentleman steps in at this point, a General Philip Sheridan, who is a Civil War General
for the Union Army. And he was fighting in the Indian Wars on the Great Plains, but loved Yellowstone
and said, here's what I'm going to do. I'm going to send the army in and I'm going to dispatch them
and they're going to take over management. And they did so from 1886 to 1916.
Not bad. They were basically in charge of like protecting
the park from illegal loggers, miners, poachers. And that's actually, I read why the park service,
their official ranger uniforms bear a resemblance to old-timey cavalry uniforms,
including the campaign hat, because it's an homage or a nod to the cavalry units that protected the
parks initially. Oh, did you see where they got that sickly color green? No, I didn't.
It's a really distinct, I mean, I just call it national forest service green. It's really
distinct. You know what it might be? They might have surveyed every single shade of green in every
national park in America and then blended it all together. And that's what came out.
Well, what's funny is like, I've done all this camping all my life and I've always seen like
those forest service trucks and then the park rangers and things everywhere. And when you see
them, and as we'll see later, you know, they also look after things like national monuments now.
So you can be like in the middle of downtown Atlanta near the King's Center. And you can see
like a park ranger and a green park truck riding around. Like, are you lost, sir? Or is it like,
is there a convention nearby? Is this cosplay? Yeah, it's not cosplay. It's one of our great
park rangers. Oh, sorry. I didn't realize you were gonna stand up for them in front of everybody
on the podcast. I love green, but that's one shade of green that I still can't wrap my head around.
Because it's all the shades of green. I guess so. Hey, can I say one thing that popped up to me
while we were researching this stuff? Just the whole idea of like that tension that push and
pull between setting aside land for the good of everybody at the expensive private interests
who are trying to extract it for their own individual gain, mostly. That's a huge, it's
still ongoing today. And it has been ever since we first started setting aside land. And it
happens elsewhere in other parts of the world, too. And it occurred to me, Chuck, that like
the people who give capitalism a bad name, capitalism isn't inherently evil. But the
people who make it seem evil are like the most full throated, worshipful capitalists of all.
The ones who use like capitalism as an excuse to just take as much as you can. Like the same
people who would like kill the golden goose to sell it to a restaurant to serve for dinner.
They're just that short-sighted. And it occurred to me that like capitalism and stewardship are
not necessarily mutually exclusive, that they can go totally hand in hand. It's just we've
been listening to the wrong branch of capitalists all these years. The people who are like, no,
you take and take and take. You maximize profits at any cost. That's the point of capitalism.
That's not inherently the point of capitalism. You can say, no, there's limits to this. We
need to save this stuff for the future. There's different ways to use these things for the good
of all people, not just the people who can afford to take and build mines or logging operations.
And if we can get to a point where we're not listening to those people anymore, we say to
hell with those people, we're going to go in this different way, kind of a stewardship version of
capitalism. I think we could continue on indefinitely like that. And make money for longer. It's a
long view. It's a macro view. Exactly. And ladies and gentlemen, that was a genuine Josh Clark soap
box moment. We need a jingle for that. And did we ever get our stupid colon jingle or have we
been just saying like insert colon jingle and it's being left in? I don't even know because I don't
know when we listen to our like quality assurance listens. I mean, it might come after that. I've
been hearing him. I've never noticed it either. All right, Jerry, you're on notice. Yeah. All right,
so now we get to the part and we're going to breeze through this a little quicker because I
would just encourage you to go back to June 3rd, 2021 and listen to John Muir colon sound.
Colon. Outdoor enthusiast. Because we covered it in depth there, but Muir moved to California in
1868, about four years after Yosemite was a state park. He loved it and immediately began lobbying
Congress to make it a national park, which it did, but it didn't include a lot of what is now Yosemite
National Park, including the Mariposa Grove and Yosemite Valley was still the state park. And he
very famously went on a little buddy buddy camping trip with Teddy Roosevelt where Roosevelt was able
to ditch his entourage and just the two of them camped in the woods for a weekend and they came
out and Roosevelt was like, I'm not sure what happened in there, you guys, but this guy works
some magic on me. Alistair Crowley showed up. Exactly. And we're going to make it a national
park. And so it was. I remember in the John Muir episode, you kind of debunking that he managed
to give the slip to his secret service agents. Did I? There was something about it. There was
something in there. I don't remember. We'll have to go back and listen. All right. So either way,
he came out of the woods. That's the curse of 1500 episodes. That's right. And he came out and was
basically national park and national monument crazy from that point on. Yeah. He had, I think by
the time his presidency was over, he had designated, this is 18, I saw 17 different national monuments
alone, which makes him second actually, the most national, what they call the national park service
calls a national monument and national park. Any of those things are called units. So the most unit
designating president of all time is Clinton. He did 19. And then Carter's third after Teddy
Roosevelt with 15. I knew I was going to get to 19. It depends on the definition of what
designate is. I wanted 20. I was one short. That guy. That guy. All right. So now Yosemite is a
full national park. By 1916, there were 14 national parks in the low 20s for national monuments.
And they were being managed. It was still kind of loosey-goosey. There was the US Forest Service.
There were soldiers, including, interestingly, Buffalo soldiers. Another great episode. Yeah, man,
this thing is peppered with them. It's really kind of all over. And then civilian appointees,
like, you know, people would get jobs and get appointments to kind of work in managed national
parks. Yeah. So in 1916, Congress was like, we got to clean this up a little bit. Who among us
is going to come up with a term of art, like dispersed camping. Nobody in charge of it right now.
We need a bureaucratic service that's going to come up with that in the future. And they passed,
and Woodrow Wilson signed, into law of the Organic Act of 1916, which basically said, hey, we've got
a lot of great stuff that we're starting to preserve, and we need to make sure that there's
an agency tasked with preserving it for future generations. And we're going to call that the
National Park Service. And with that, the MPS was born. Yes. He said, who among you knows what
all shades of green look like together? And they showed him and he went, ew. Yeah. He was like,
just go with it. He said, well, no one else is going to paint their car that color. So we made
us all use it. Right. So should we talk a little bit about the Grand Canyon? Yeah, why not? Have
you ever been? Yes, the Grand Canyon is amazing, especially the North Rim. It's incredibly beautiful,
although I haven't been in the canyon. And by the way, Chuck, we also did the mystery of the Grand
Canyon newlyweds too. Oh, yeah. I think at the time, I probably mentioned that I hiked halfway down,
but did not have like camping or rafting reservations or anything. So we didn't go all the
way down. There's a nice place about halfway down where you can just kind of hang out. And then the
hike back out up is really tough, by the way. It's not for the faint of heart. I was younger and
fitter back then and I was fine. And I also worked a TV commercial one time where they put
probably 40 motor homes on the rim of the Grand Canyon for us to stay in. Oh, yeah. Which was
really interesting. How close to the rim? I mean, we were 50 feet away. I mean, it was, you know,
you go out to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night if that's your jam and don't go that
way. That was a Michael Bay job. He got whatever he wanted. We couldn't waste time fairing people
from the closest hotel, which was not close. So that was the, you may not have known it at the
time, but those RVs parked along the rim of the Grand Canyon was actually Michael Bay's secret
homage to Ralph Henry Cameron, the terrible senator and possibly worst American ever to live
that who didn't involve murdering anybody. I can't tell any Michael Bay stories because
I just don't want to do that in this public of a forum, but I will say this.
PAs had six people to a motor home. Michael Bay himself had three motor homes.
Wow. All connected? They were all in a little triangle and those speculation about what each
was for. And I'll just tell you later what we came up with. Okay. I can't wait.
All right. But you mentioned sort of one of the villains in this great story,
Ralph Henry Cameron, who was a senator in Arizona and he owned a lot of land that,
including parts of the rim of the Grand Canyon and parts of the Bright Angel Trail,
which is the trail that goes down. And he was making a lot of money instead to make a lot
more. And he was like, you can't, you can't do this. I'm charging people a buck a piece
to go down that trail, which is about 1675 in today's dollars. And I've built a little,
that kind of halfway point I was talking about, he built a little Oasis there. He did have hotels
near the rim of the canyon. And they said, I'm sorry, but you, this is ours now. I guess it was
an imminent domain play, right? And they said it belongs to us. Right. And by us, we mean the
American people. Yeah. You know, there's a distinction. It's not like, it's not like Teddy
Roosevelt was like, this is my personal canyon. I'm going to be charging the tolls here now.
Yeah, exactly. Right. So Cameron was totally defiant. He was, and it's not like he was just
like some two bit, you know, toll operator charging a buck to everybody trying to get down
in the canyon. He had hotels, I think you said. He was also involved in mining. Like he was doing,
he was exploiting this as much as he could. And he continued to do it even after Congress said,
no, this is now a national park. He said, you know, nuts to your national park. And the Supreme
Court said, yeah, that's a national park now. You need to stop all this operation. He said,
nuts to the Supreme Court. And then finally, the LA Times took an interest in him right before the
1926 election, his reelection bid for the Senate. And they, they, I guess, released a series of
like 10 articles that were really unflattering, but apparently all true. They just did some
serious investigating. And this guy was like, he was as big as a bad man. He was a kickback guy.
He'd be like, Hey, I'm a senator. Give me some money and I'll get you whatever you want. You
know, like that was the kind of representative he was. And so they, they outed him and the,
the good people of Arizona rose to the occasion and voted him out of office.
Yeah, he was doing, I mean, he was spreading rumors. He was telling lies. He had a family
member appointed as the post office director for, I guess, whatever the post office is out there.
And they were intercepting mail and opening mail. And it was, they had to do things like encoded
and in secret, like in the area, just to get their messages through, not a good dude. And
like you said, it came back to bite him and he, he lost. So that's why history probably
doesn't remember him so much. Hooray, democracy. That's right. So after he lost and after he
went away, the Grand Canyon was an unfettered national park from that point on. That's right.
Full of tourists, tour buses. Yeah. And that park also, Chuck, is bigger than the state of Rhode Island.
Poor Rhode Island. Why does it always get thrown in there? Well, it's a tiny state. It's a good
reference point. It is. And it's not, I mean, when you stand at the rim of the Grand Canyon,
it looks like you could fit a few Rhode Islands in that sliver. But it's, it's pretty amazing.
It's genuinely, genuinely one of the most like, like literally breathtaking things you'll ever see
is when you first sort of walk out there and lay your eyes on it. Like you can hear about it.
You can see pictures of it. You can see drone footage of it. But until you're standing there,
it's truly just breathtaking and awe-inspiring. And in that sense, Chuck, it's a, it's a really
good example of what, what meets the criteria for a national park. Because one of the things the
National Park Service started doing when it was created was identifying, you know, what makes a
national park a national park? Everybody wants, you know, some little beautiful slice of their,
their neighborhood or their area, like turned into a national park. Like it's preserved from
that point on. It's amazing and beautiful when that happens. But that doesn't mean that it really
kind of is a true national park. And one of the things that they've said, like this would make
an area a national park would be something that is so unique and so significant. There may not be
anything like it in the world, whether it has to do with grandeur, scope, size. I know that there's,
there's some kinds of national parks that are set aside because they're like the only place that a
kind of fossil can be discovered. There's something called the agate fossil beds in
national park, I think in Nebraska. And there are these two mounds that for some reason just
escaped glacial erosion. And so they're this like perfect undisturbed timeline of evolution on that
corner of earth. You just can't find that anywhere else on the planet. And so they're like, this,
this clearly qualifies as a national park.
Yeah. And that's, you know, it's good to point out, I know you found that cool stuff on geodiversity,
which is, it basically means land forms and landscapes of an area. And, you know, if you go
to Arches National Park or Devil's Tower National Monument, like, or like you were talking about
the fossil beds monument in Nebraska, or cave systems, things like that. This is what geodiversity
is. And it's a little less sexy as far as protection goes, because it's not a cute little animal.
And sometimes it's not as dramatic, like as arches, you know, sometimes, like it is,
like a fossil bed, which may not be the most amazing thing to look at. But like protecting
these sites are super, super important to not only just preserve it, but to learn from it.
Because, you know, once that's gone, it's gone.
Yeah. And one of the things I ran across this really cool quote from 1917, the MPS worker
said that geology is the anatomy of scenery. And I think that's a really amazing way to put it.
What they're basically saying is it's like, it needs to be protected as much, if not more,
as biodiversity does within these parks, from human activity, from exploitation,
but also from like climate change and other processes that we're going to see are like
becoming more and more of a challenge for national parks. But there's like just the scenery alone
in a national park is worth preserving. Because there's things like, if you go to see Old Faithful,
Chuck, and I've seen Old Faithful, like we have something to talk about. There's a shared experience,
even though we might have gone 50 years apart, we could probably based on your age.
But like that's a huge thing. Not everything has that. Or like they inspire awe. Like when's the
last time you were moved to awe like around Atlanta? Like you weren't, it just doesn't happen. Like
these are unique landscapes. And the reason that they are unique is because of the geology.
And so geo diversity, like biodiversity needs to be protected as well as a concept that makes sense.
Yeah. And you know, protection means sometimes you'll go to a national park
years later where you're like, oh, I used to be able to go closer to this thing. And I can't do
that anymore. You know, you think about someone like, oh, I want to carve my tree in this or
carve my name in this tree or on this rock. And you don't think about like, I've never
done stuff like that. But people do that stuff, you don't think about tens of thousands or millions
of people doing that over the years. And so like they've had to kind of figuratively rope off a
lot of this stuff, as these arches become more fragile and things like that. So your access is
going to be a little more limited than it once was, but it's all in the name of protection.
Yeah. It's good stuff. So the westward stuff, like Yosemite's El Capitan and the Yosemite Valley
and that amazing waterfall, which apparently, according to Backpacker magazine, you can see
what are called moonbows from the waterfall mist at Yosemite. Did you know that?
I've never seen one. I mean, I've spent a lot of time there. It sounds amazing. It sounds super cool.
It's a rainbow that you see at night under a moon. Yeah. I can't imagine what that is like.
Probably have a full moon, right? I would think so, at the very least,
to be even better in a full moon. But again, you're not going to see a moonbow around Atlanta
or around Houston or Cleveland. The reason that these parks exist and the reason that
they deserve protection is because they are unique and they do things to us that we haven't
yet figured out how to put our finger on. We just know that they move us somehow.
I read a quote, Chuck, from an activist and writer named Terry Tempest Williams,
and I think it puts it really well. She said that national parks are breathing spaces
in a society increasingly holding its breath. I love that. I do too, Chuck.
You're also not going to see a river on fire from pollution and garbage in the national park.
It's pretty awe-inspiring. Yeah. You're not going to see a Sicilian man dressed as a Native
American turning and crying toward a camera in a national park.
Got to go to Cleveland for that first thing. Right.
All right, so thing, well, maybe we should take a break. Should we take a break?
Yeah, let's.
This sounds like a good point to stop. All right, we'll talk about what's going on out west and
the very little going on here in the east when we get back.
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All right. So things are really cruising up through the 1920s out west.
Zion and Bryce Canyon, you got Glacier, you got Yellowstone, you got Yosemite. Like they're just,
they're going hog wild on National Parkland. And back east at that point, the only National Park
was Acadia National Park in Maine. And so Congress in the mid 1920s says, you know what,
we should probably get rolling here in the Midwest and on the east coast and designate some of this
land too, because it may not be quite as grand, but it's still pretty great. And National Parks,
like in the Appalachian region, Shenandoah, Great Smoky Mountains, Mammoth Caves,
things like that were designated, but they're like, but listen,
we spent a lot of money out west and we're not going to pony up to pay for all this land.
So another gentleman steps forward at this point, John D. Rockefeller Jr. and said, hey,
I've got a ton of oil money for my dad. And what better way to spend that, those ill-gotten gains
than to help buy back a lot of this land. So he donated a ton. He donated five million bucks
to buy land for the Great Smoky Mountains. He got his charitable foundations involved
to help raise more money for Grand Teton National Parks in Shenandoah. And pretty soon,
he had covered like a lot of this new land, like the financing behind it.
Yeah. In today's dollars, just for a stand of sugar pines outside of Yosemite and the land
for the Smoky Mountains National Park, he ponied up almost a hundred million dollars of his own
money. In today's dollars, that's amazing. Yeah, it really is. So I mean, hats off to John D.
Rockefeller and also hats off to Jr. Thank you. And hats off to FDR too, who around this time
became president. And he saw in the New Deal, the Depression era New Deal where
part of the purpose of which was to help alleviate the worst effects of the Depression on Americans
was to put people to work using federal funds, which to me is just one of the best things you
could possibly spend federal funds on is to help out-of-work Americans during particularly hard
times. Totally. That's what the Civilian Conservation Corps was about. Like they would hire
out-of-work men in particular, aged 18 to 25, and put them to work. And one of the ways that
they were put to work, one of the big ways they were put to work was basically establishing new
national parks. Yeah, hundreds of thousands of these people were employed. And I think from 1933
to 1942, about 2 million enrollees worked at close to 200 of these camps in 94 national parks and
monuments. And there's a couple of them, Great Smoky Mountains National Park in North Carolina
and Tennessee and Big Bend in Texas were basically entirely created from work by CCC labor.
Yes. And one of the things that they were also tasked with was creating visitor centers
as part of like the Smoky Mountains Park and I guess Shenandoah too, or Big Bend I should say.
But there weren't nearly enough visitor centers when the post-war boom hit after World War II.
And there were a bunch of Americans who suddenly were flush with a lot more money,
who spent it on cars and started hitting the road and saying like let's see these national
parks for ourselves. Yeah, and of course that put a stress on the parks. So they launched Mission
66, which was basically by 1966, which is the 50th anniversary of the NPS. We want to have a lot more
of this under control because of the influx of people now who can afford to buy cars and are
coming in. And one of those big things was visitor centers, public services and they still,
when you go to these visitor centers, they have these great interactive exhibits and audio visual
programming and stuff like that. I mean, that's as far as a lot of people go. They kind of drive
around and they'll go to these visitor centers and they'll leave. I again, I recommend you sort
of get a little more adventurous if you're able to and kind of peel off from the pack, but that's
just the way I like to do things. I'm not yucking anyone's yum. But by 1960, there was a pretty big
concern about, at least from conservationists, about the fact that, hey, the wolves have disappeared.
Some of this land is too busy right now. And so they, in 1963, they got a committee together
chaired by exactly the right person. If you're a friend of the environment, an environmental
scientist named A. Starker Leopold, who drew up a report called Wildlife Problems in National Parks
Forever to be known as the Leopold Report. Notice there's no colon in that title too.
This is the pre-colon era. He had no use for that. He was too busy trying to save the planet.
Yes. So this Leopold report basically said, hey, everybody, we are losing biodiversity and everybody
said, what's that? And they said, just give it a few years and everybody will know what that means.
But our parks are in big trouble. We're losing a lot of animals. A lot of it, we're doing ourselves.
A lot of it is from human activity and encroachment. And we need to start protecting the animals in
the park. And so that became kind of like a guiding principle of the National Parks Service.
So much so that they formed the Biological Resources Division, which is in charge of
wildlife management in all of the parks, which is really something because I don't think we've said
yet, but the National Parks in America comprise something like 84 million acres. So the Biological
Resources Division is in charge of 84 million acres of wildlife to make sure that everybody's
okay in that, from Yogi Bear to the Dancing Bear at the Visitor Center at Yellowstone.
That's right. And you mentioned the Olympic Marmot. That is one of two
new animals that lives exclusively inside the bounds of a national park, the Olympic Marmot,
an Olympic National Park in the Shenandoah Salamander. You can guess where that one is.
But it's an interesting, you know, the Leopold Report, it was a pretty bold statement to basically
say that I think the quote is, a national park should represent a vignette of primitive America.
So Leopold's idea was like, this needs to be like we found it. And we need to preserve it and or
maybe even return it to that state where we have so far screwed up. Obviously, just with people
visiting, you're never going to get to that point. But it's a good lofty goal, I think.
It is. And again, one of the things they found out over the years is like, you know, there's this
idea that Native Americans were just living on this untouched pristine land and all you had to do
was remove the Native Americans and it would remain that way. And they found out that, oh,
no, actually, the Native Americans were actively managing these landscapes. And now we have to
go figure out how to do that from them. So that really set everybody back, but that's become
part of like the National Park Service mission as well. Yeah. And I think you can look no further
than the reintroduction of the wolf to Yellowstone. Gray wolves in 1995, they were hunted to extinction
in the 30s. And you're like, oh, why do you need wolves? Like, aren't they just going to threaten
people? We've talked about biodiversity before. It's really important to trickle down impact.
It's called the trophic cascade. And all of a sudden, wolves are back. So the elk are like,
oh, we can't just stay in one place and overgraze. We got to get on the move.
Right. And now they're not overgrazing. So there's less erosion on the river banks.
There are healthier grasslands. They're not overgrazing willow trees. So the beavers are like,
hey, I can come back because I love those willow trees. I love to build dams. If you listened
to our episode on beavers, you know that they're a keystone species. So when the beavers are back,
that means fish are back and mammals are back and birds are back. And this is all because
they reintroduced the gray wolf. Yeah, it's just pretty neat. I love this stuff.
Except I always feel bad for the prey animals that are like, they go from being like easy going
to scared all the time, you know, but it helps everything else that they are. It's tough. Nature
is tough. Yeah. So that Leopold report came out in 63. And unfortunately, it didn't solve
all of the problems permanently. I don't know that solved any problems, but it basically said,
here's a bunch of problems and we need to wrap our heads around them and get them solved,
mainly figuring out how to protect the biodiversity and later on the geo diversity
in these national parks. And the stuff that it tasks the National Park Service with taking on
has like just gotten increasingly more difficult. More people visit the parks and whenever there's
more humans, there's more trash, there's more wildlife encounters, there's more cars causing
traffic jams, there's more need for reservations and there's just much more problems and more
visitors you have. It's like the national parks can be a victim of their own success sometimes.
And then there's also other like challenges too that have nothing to do with the amount of people
coming. Like again, climate change is starting to pose a real problem. I saw somewhere that
Glacier National Park may just be a name in 30 years that there's not going to be any glaciers
left. And so one of the things the National Park Service, one of the services it provides is
like being able to study these generally like pristine preserved landscapes and see what's
happening in the rest of the world, in nature, in our own backyard, in America, you know?
Yeah, absolutely. And it's, you know, they struggle because of underfunding and understaffing.
And you know, next time you hear someone in your family say like, what a waste of money to throw
this money toward national parks, like just let them be, go over there and tap them on the shoulder
and say it's a great investment actually, sir or ma'am. Here's a little stat for you. In 2013,
there were 273 million visitors to National Park Service areas and they spent about
$14.6 billion in the communities near these places to the tune of about 200,000 local jobs
and a total of $26.5 billion back to the economy of the United States. If you do the math,
the federal budget for the NPS is about $2.7 billion. So every dollar that is invested comes
back tenfold in economic activity and that, my friend, is a great return. Yeah, it definitely
supports the idea of preserving land away from logging, mining, hunting interests.
It's irrefutable right there. I love it. I love it too. So we were talking about challenges,
though, before that wonderful little economic stat, though. And one of the challenges that
the parks are facing is this like a growing perception that doesn't seem to be rooted in
reality, statistically speaking at least, that national parks are actually like really dangerous
places to be and that they seem to be a place where you're likelier to die than say elsewhere
in America, which I don't think is true, right? Yeah, there's a great article called National
Park Murders, colon, hundreds killed missing no one is talking from Emily Cantner. And it's,
I mean, this story kind of came about after the Gabby Petito story. Of course, her body,
sadly, was discovered in Grand Teton National Park. In 2019, the NPS chief said that there's
basically 312 deaths per year in national parks, one for every 1 million visitors. So
that's a pretty low number. Drowning is the leading cause of death, and there's,
you know, vehicle accidents, falls, poisonings, wildlife encounters, natural causes, suicide.
And then, you know, there are murders and sexual assaults in national park. They're
pretty rare. But anytime someone gets murdered in a national park, it makes the news. And so it's
sort of a pretty big story. Should not make you not want to visit them. But, you know, it's,
they're big open areas. And you can, you can trust almost everyone when you go there. But
anytime someone gets murdered, someone says, it's a perfect place to do that. You're out the middle
of nowhere, you can get rid of a body so easily out there. Right. I think also, because it's so rare,
that's why it makes the news. And weirdly, it seems to amplify it. Because I was looking up the
stat, I'm like, is one death per million? Is that, is that low? And it's super low. I was looking at
Atlanta's murder statistics. So that's one death. You just said also, drownings, poisonings, animal
encounters. In Atlanta, murders alone, there's 60 per million murders in a year. This is one death
per million in a year in the national park, entire national park system. So yes, it is very
lopsided and unfair to say the national parks are a dangerous place and that there's actually like
a disproportionately high number of deaths and homicides there. It's just patently untrue.
Right. But you should be careful anytime you're, you should camp with a buddy if you can. And,
you know, just be careful anytime you're camping, even if it's not in the national park.
Yeah, for sure. If you're looking at the, it is interesting because there's one stat
that North Cascades National Park in Washington has 65 times higher death rate than any of the
other parks, which is, but they don't know why. I've kind of tried to find out and it seems like
no one can really tell. It's the Atlanta of the national park system, I guess.
65.2 deaths for every million people. No, that is definitely high and odd. So yeah,
I guess just steer clear of that one. No, no, no, no, no. But this was such a good idea and
I think we should close on the fact that the world followed our lead, right?
Yeah. So I think we were saying that early on, like the Yellowstone was the first in the world,
but in very short order, the Australians said, Hey, we're working on the same kind of thing too.
And they established one called the Royal National Park all the way back in 1879, I think.
Yeah, not bad. Canada came along right after that. I think New Zealand followed suit after
that. Then Europe got on board and then Africa got on board. And now there are more than 4,000
national parks all over the world. Yeah, it was just a good idea. And I'd actually like to close
with this, Chuck, because one of the huge challenges that are facing national parks is that the most
popular national parks are super popular. I think like the 2020 or maybe five or four, some crazy
low number of national parks made up like 50% of visitor rates in 2021. Like it's really lopsided.
So the national parks of them is trying to be like, Hey, don't forget this national park. And
then here's another one over here you should check out. And I was reading about that in the Sierra
Club has a proposal. It's make more national parks. You make a new national park and you
advertise that there's a new national park. It's going to take away some of those people
who would have otherwise gone to Yellowstone. And so more national parks is just a good idea
all across the board, but it will also alleviate one of the big pressing problems,
which is over attendance at certain parks. I love it. More national parks, everybody.
Okay. That's what I say. Well, since Chuck said that's what I say, of course that means it's time
for listener mail. I'm going to call this a repeated tangent. It happens every now and then.
Hey guys, listen to the episode on the Chowchilla Bus Kidnapping and Chuck till or Josh tells Chuck
a story in a tangent about seeing Robert Coley on TV. I would make Elvis so Maddie shoot appliances.
I immediately remembered an older stuff. You should know computer addiction.
Josh told Chuck the same tangent about seeing Robert Coley on TV. And I was listening to that
episode when I moved my life from a small town in Arkansas to Louisiana. And that tangent
and Chuck doing an Elvis impression made me laugh so hard that I literally had soda coming out of
my nose. Ouch. I feel bad that I didn't do the Elvis impression this time too. That's okay,
you've done it before. Of course I have, man. Thinking about this repeated tangent put into
perspective that I've been a listener since I was in college seven years ago through three job
changes, six moves. Thank you for all the good times and all the good information. But my girlfriend
and everyone else I shared tidbits with probably wouldn't call it good information. Boo to them.
So Connor C in Chicago, you might want to rethink your, the people you're hanging out with.
He almost said it. Chuck went right up to the edge, Connor, right up to the canyon rim. You
take it from there. I did. Well, if you want to be like Connor and get us to tell you to rethink
your life, you should email us. Like Connor, you can wrap it up, send it in an email to
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For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app. Apple podcasts are wherever
you listen to your favorite shows. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips
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give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. And
a different hot, sexy teen crush boy band or each week to guide you through life. Tell everybody,
yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen. So we'll never, ever have to say
bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast or
wherever you listen to podcasts.