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by dghlsakjg
841 days ago
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The most amazing thing about Yellowstone (or any of the famous National Parks) is that, as busy as it is, if you get 1/2 a mile from the road, it is still very wild. There is a certain tension in that the nature of the experience of wilderness areas is necessarily exclusionary. For example wheeled and mechanical transportation is excluded with limited exemptions for the disabled, the current limitation is that wheelchair users MUST use chairs that are 'Suitable for indoor pedestrian use'. Indoor use chairs are notoriously shit on natural surfaces, but should we allow ATVs? Probably not. Should we allow handcycles so disabled people can go through mud? I think so, but purists think otherwise. |
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The best wilderness I've ever experienced is the Mojave Wilderness. A place the size of Rhode Island, with 4 roads, a handful of trails, and a visitor's center. Otherwise, it's basically untouched desert. Absolutely gorgeous.
IMO, there's one fundamental difference between a park and wilderness: a park is a curated experience, and as such is a product of, and a part of, human civilization. That intrinsically means you are at the whims of others, perhaps benevolently so in the case of National Parks, but manipulated nonetheless. Wilderness means freedom from that omnipresent force of human intention, because the wilderness has no intention for you: it is ambivalent to your presence. The desert won't help you survive, but it's also not going to try and kill you or rob you, either. That's freedom you can't find on a trail overlooking a tangle of roads.