Emma Court / Business Insider
- During the recent monthlong US government shutdown, national parks like Joshua Tree were trashed and vandalized.
- But when I visited Joshua Tree for the first time this month, the park looked picture-perfect.
- An expert explained to me that for the local ecosystem, this kind of damage can take hundreds of years to replace.
The damage done to the iconic Joshua Tree National Park during the recent, month-long government shutdown captivated and horrified many people.
I was one of them. And as a frequent visitor to US national parks, I was planning a trip to Joshua Tree just weeks after the shutdown ended. I wasn’t quite sure what to expect there.
After all, vandals had reportedly knocked down Joshua trees and sprayed graffiti. And with few park staff on duty, public toilets filled and visitors reportedly scattered trash.
It could take hundreds of years for the park to recover, a former Joshua Tree superintendent even said.
Yet when I visited this month for the first time, the California park’s more than 1,200 square miles of desert looked just like the guidebook cover.
I was struck not by the damage, as I had expected, but by the Joshua trees themselves: Vividly green and spiky, and looking much like a Dr. Seuss creation, a comparison that’s frequently drawn.
When I reached David Lamfrom, the California desert director for the National Parks Conservation Association, by phone last week, he was glad to hear about my experience, and said it suggested that the desert had been restored at the surface level. Having park staff back at work, thanks to a temporary funding bill at the end of January, is a key part of that, he said.
But that pristine perception I got was also deceptive. Because of a dearth of moisture, time and plant growth works differently in the desert, he said. A plant may be tiny and humble-looking, and yet be incredibly old. If a Joshua tree is cut down, it could take 100 or 200 years before a new tree grows to provide the same kinds of ecological services to what’s around it, including lizards, owls, hawks and more.
"It’s not that the place as a whole is ruined," he said. "It’s that to replace what has been damaged will take a period that’s far longer than any of our lifetimes."
Read more: It could take 300 years for Joshua Tree National Park to recover from the government shutdown
Joshua trees were supposedly named by Mormons after the prophet Joshua, because of their upward-reaching limbs. There are probably thousands of them in the park, where they dot the landscape.
Emma Court / Business Insider.
The National Parks Conservation Association’s Lamfrom was in Joshua Tree in the first days of the shutdown, and said he encountered a madhouse. Located just a few hours from Los Angeles and other major cities, the park attracts about 2.8 million visitors annually, and the winter is an especially popular time.
Emma Court / Business Insider
He described it as a story of competing forces, with the "absolute maximum visitation and absolute minimum supervision," as just a skeleton crew of staffers were working. In addition to the park rangers, some of whom reportedly worked without pay during the shutdown, plenty of others helped out during the shutdown, including volunteers and community members.
Emma Court / Business Insider
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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Source: Business Insider – ecourt@businessinsider.com (Emma Court)
