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Pinnacles National Park fully reopens to visitors

Pinnacles National Park fully reopens to visitors 1

While temperatures approached 100 degrees Friday, Pinnacles National Park fully reopened to visitors last week.

The park closed the west end of the park including the entrance near Soledad and all trails except for the Bench and Sycamore trails last month as a fire safety precaution.

“We have not experienced a large fire in a number of years, actually more than 15, and if you look at our fire history almost all of the park has burned throughout the years,” said park Superintendent Blanca Alvarez Stransky. “So we’ve been told by our fire management officers that Pinnacles is at a high risk for fire, so we’re taking every precaution we can to prevent that and that’s one of the reasons we had to close.”

  • The rugged rocks of Pinnacles’ High Peaks trail form a window to the national park below. (Photo courtesy of Tom Bentley)

  • Rock formations are seen near the Balconies Cave Trail at Pinnacles National Park in Soledad. (David Royal/Monterey Herald archives)

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  • Nicole Belle Isle, right, of SheClimbs, teaches an intro to climbing course through REI at Pinnacles National Park near Paicines, Calif., Saturday, Oct. 11, 2014. Belle Isle has been a huge influencer in encouraging women to climb and bringing women together to climb. (Patrick Tehan/Bay Area News Group)

  • Fossil fumaroles are a highlight on the Pinnacles hiking trail. (Mary Orlin/Bay Area News Group)

  • Alexandre Ribero of Brazil carries his son Alex ,7, on the Balconies Cave Trail at Pinnacles National Park in Soledad on Saturday August 27, 2016. (David Royal – Monterey Herald)

  • Rachel Klinkatsis, left, and Britania Light, both of the Bay Area, walk on the Balconies Cave Trail at Pinnacles National Park in Soledad on Saturday August 27, 2016. (David Royal – Monterey Herald)

  • Pinnacles National Park offers rugged trails, spectacular views and otherworldly rock formations. (Photo courtesy of Tom Bentley)

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    Rock formations are seen from the High Peaks Trail at Pinnacles National Monument in Paicines on April 22, 2010. President Obama on Jan. 10, 2013, signed a bill elevating its status from a national monument to a national park.

  • The view from Condor Gulch Trail at Pinnacles National Monument in Paicines is photographed on April 22, 2010. (President Obama on Jan. 10, 2013 signed a bill elevating its status from a national monument to a national park.

  • John Debell heads down the High Peaks Trail at Pinnacles National Monument in Paicines on April 22, 2010. Debell is from Menlo Park. (Gary Reyes/Mercury News)

  • Pinnacles National Park has been closed to people making day trips. (Monterey Herald archives)

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Stransky cited the change in seasons leading to increased humidity at night and shorter days and the slow return of wildland fire resources to the area as reasons to fully reopen the park. Multiple wildfires were burning in the region, in the state and in the western United States causing the partial closures.

“We were doing our part to support the firefighting efforts by trying to limit folks so if there was a fire we could easily evacuate,” she said. “People come to our parks and they go hiking in the wilderness and it’s very difficult to get to them if there is a fire.”

However, Stransky said the park still has a high fuel load of dried vegetation and fire danger will fluctuate between high and very high until December. The fire danger was very high Thursday and should remain there into the weekend. All campfires or cooking fires are prohibited in the park and use of propane or gas stoves for cooking purposes is restricted to designated campsites, use of charcoal grills is prohibited, smoking is only allowed within enclosed vehicles and driving or parking vehicles off-road and/or on vegetation is prohibited.

“We don’t have what they call an initial attack crew available, so if there was a small fire that was started in the park we do not have anyone that’s trained that can immediately go to that area,” she said. “We would have to wait for the response to come out of the Cal Fire station that’s further down the road. Because of all the fires in California we were at 96% commitment of resources, so that puts us in a little bit of a shaky situation.”

COVID-19 regulations remain in place at the park, keeping the Bear Gulch Nature Canter and West Visitor Center closed as well as the Balconies and Bear Gulch Caves. Shuttle services inside the park remain non-operational.

“It’s hard to socially distance (in the caves) and it’s hard not to touch everything when you’re going through,” Stransky said. “It’s also a moist, dark space that’s a perfect breeding ground for all kinds of germs.”

The caves will not be available to provide natural air conditioning this weekend as temperatures are expected to hover in the 90s. Stransky advised visitors to come prepared.

“Come out in the early morning or late afternoon (to avoid the hottest time of the day),” she said.

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