forrestranger wrote:
> i must be the minority here, i love having a campfire, that's
> one reason why i like to go. love to sit around a fire at night
> and talk.
From a quick look at the campground maps, there are over 400 campsites at the east end of the valley, not counting the backpacker campground which has at least 50, and Camp 4, which is not fully at the east end.
How many fires can the valley support, and still have air that won't kill off, or make miserable, the people that are enjoying their fires (and their neighbors) a few years early? 400? 200? 10?
I'm sure some small, well tended and dry wood fires would not have an enourmous impact on the air, maybe even 50 of them. But there are the guys like Sierranomad mentioned, dragging a tree into camp. Then there are the others, who, despite the rule of burning NOTHING from the forest floor, will be adding cones and needles and wet twigs or deadwood. So instead of the theoretical 50 clean fires it could support, that would cut it down to half that, to allow for a few abusers.
Now, how do you decide who gets to have the 25 fires? A lottery? And who volunteers to police them so no one else starts one?
I understand, and I think a lot of folks agree, that a nighttime campfire can be a pleasant experience socially. In a wide-open-spaces environment, maybe it's a good thing. But in a closed end of a valley, where campsites are packed in very close together, you have to take that into account, rather than simply look at how nice it is to have a campfire and sit around and talk.
There are plenty of campgrounds all around the state, in more open areas, more suited to "recreational camping" where everyone has a fire, the air isn't quite as severely affected, and people are more spread out. The valley doesn't have any of those.
It's my understanding that fires are supposed to go out at 10PM, "quiet time", regardless of time of year in the campgrounds in the valley. And 98% of people, at least in the times I visit, comply, or at least let them burn down by then. Many times I've wished a late hour noisy group would just shut up for a minute and listen, so they could realize that they are in fact the only ones making noise, everyone else is either (trying to be) asleep or quietly relaxing. Even when they talk quietly, the "group laugh" syndrome, where every few minutes there's a loud group laugh, waking you back up from where you almost drifted off, keeps people from sleeping. There's nearly always one woman in these groups who is drunk, has a loud laugh, and everything is outrageously funny. They might as well just talk loud and be noisy, at least you can adjust to that, instead of laying there wondering how on earth you're going to get up at 5 for your Half Dome hike, while waiting for the next group laugh.
The propane fire ring mentioned might be an option for helping the air quality, but then again it might encourage the night partiers to stay out even later.
It would be just as enjoyable to have a friendly campfire when the fire danger somewhere is extreme; but that's not allowed, and people don't argue with it, usually. But the consequences of that are more obvious, quick and devastating if something happens. Killing people by giving them severely polluted air to breathe is not so obvious, it may take a long time, and you can always blame something else or argue that there's no proof it caused anything. Stinking things up and making them ugly from the smoke is a more direct affect, but no one campfire is responsible, so since 'everyone's doing it', it's OK, because why should I not have a fire when they all do.
Nice as it may be, the valley just isn't suited to hosting any large number of campfires, so my suggestion would be to camp in the valley to enjoy what it offers, respect its limitations, and when you're in the mood for the late night campfire chat sessions, camp in a place more suitable for that.
Gary
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