Alex Benjamin
Allowing Ads
What is the point of all those idiotic Google Earth pop-ups beside each image on the link? They don't add anything - they detract. Another desperate gimmick it seems.
Interesting parallels between this and the other currently active thread about pinpointing the location of famous photographs. This takes it to another fascinating level!
Only the well known Yosemite shots in the link are "driveable", involving just short walks. The older locations are well into backcountry and require more serious effort to get to. All these web GPS location links and Utube virtual guided tours these days have become a curse on many formerly quiet places, and have ruined their solace with overwhelming herds of visitors trampling everything. Spots that once didn't see a visitor a month, or even in a year, now require reservation permits limited to 50 to 200 people per day. That's mainly the case with the Southwest. The High Sierra is more tightly regulated. That still leaves many options peripherally for vehicle access, both paved roads and unpaved, including 4WD tracks.
And frankly, there was a time when we locals resented encountering the huge horse convoys of that Club Ansel once represented, with their big tent villages, trail damage, and litter, and even horse races in fragile meadows! Those big heavily-furnished trips were meant to expose enough people at a time to a high-country experience so that it would prompt protection of significant parts of it. Well, that did serve its purpose at one point in time; but they kept it up well afterwards as if by special exemption. Now, thank goodness, that kind of thing is no longer allowed.
There are other areas Ansel reached as a backpacker prior to all that, represented in some of his early little prints - some of my favorite images of his - which are still relatively remote places to this day. I hesitate to mention specific locations. But his backpacking days were relatively brief, mainly only in his 20's. After that, and even during much of it, he used a pack mule instead. Then the era of leading big groups, and sneaking in a few shots in his spare time. Yosemite Valley was an exception. It's been a tourist destination ever since the 1860's. My babysitter as an infant was the first white woman ever there - she was over 90 when I was a child, so would have been around 7 yrs old when she saw the Valley for the first time. Within the overall boundaries of Yos NP there are indeed certain huge swaths which to this day get very little visitation; but it takes some real effort to get there. On my last trip into one such area, it was difficult to detect any evidence of man, other than obsidian chips left behind by ancient bighorn sheep hunters. There are no trails, no footprints, not even any cairn markers, no fire rings, no recognizable campsites, no detritus. That's the way it should be.
Alan - Yosemite Valley was already being mauled back in horse days. John Muir at first actually ran a lumber mill there below Yosemite Falls for sake of the sprawling hotel. The resident Indians were forcibly driven out; big herds of cattle were in the meadows for sake of tourist beef. Then it became a State Park. The meadows higher up were being so severely sheep grazed, along with other egregious issues lower down, that eventually a small contingent of the US Army had intervene to impose a semblance of order. Now certain restrictions are in place again so the place doesn't get loved to death. Many summer days, Yosemite Valley is literally a smoke-filled city of 30,000 people. Previsualize that. If you want one of those AA classic print experiences, go there during a winter snowstorm instead.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?