Entries tagged as haleakala national park

May 2025

Park News

May 17 is the 71st anniversary of the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court ruling desegregating our nation’s schools. “Separate But Equal” is a 1991 television mini-series. Sidney Poitier didn’t do TV movies, but he agreed to play Thurgood Marshall in this one. Other well-known actors in the cast include Burt Lancaster (in his last role), Cleavon Little, Henderson Forsythe, and Richard Kiley. See the trailer on IMDb. Your streaming service may offer the film.

          Why am I mentioning this? The Court bundled together five separate challenges to racial segregation in public schools, from Washington, D.C., Delaware, Virginia, South Carolina and Kansas (the film concentrates on this particular one). The Kansas lawsuit became the case name, and Topeka is the home of the National Park Service’s Brown v. Board of Education National Historical Park. Only 109 national park sites charge admission, and this place is fee-free.

Subpar parks review for May

         This month’s evaluation from the Subpar Parks Illustrated National Parks Calendar is about Indiana Dunes National Park: “Dunes are not that high.”

         So…15 miles of beachfront on Lake Michigan, 50 miles of trails, and historic buildings (including one from the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair), not to mention free admission count for nothing?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Get a whiff of this (or not)

         “Park toilet closures causing a stink” read a recent USA Today article. “If you’re struggling to find a restroom at some National Park Service sites this spring, you’re not alone,” the piece goes on to say. “Multiple national parks have closed their toilets and visitor centers, citing staffing issues as a result of President Donald Trump’s budget cuts, buyouts and layoffs across the National Park Service.” It notes that 2,400 to 2,500 staff positions have been eliminated, which is a problem during this season. The parks will hire more seasonal workers than usual this summer, which hopefully will bring relief.

 

         The motto for now, though, is “know before you go…” 

 

         P.S. The USA Today article got the number of Park Service units wrong. The number is 433, not 496.

Park Reservations 

         More national park sites will require reservations to visit this year, a practice started a few years ago to control overcrowding.

The booking provides visitors with a timed entry, reserved in advance, for a small sum. Time slots in popular parks may fill up quickly, so plan ahead as much as possible.

Here are the park sites requiring some kind of reservation in 2025:

Reading Material

         May is Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month. I wrote two articles for Fodor’s Travel--one lists the World War II Japanese detention camps, and gives a bit of US history regarding Asian immigrants. Another is on exquisite Japanese gardens around the country.

         And on May 2, fellow Pelican Publishing Group author Erin Stevenson brings out Dr. Mallory and the Undercover Dog-Dad.

Mother’s Day

As I wrote in More Life Lessons from the National Parks, Waco Mammoth National Monument in Texas might be a good place to take your mom—or to remember her if she’s no longer on this earth. The park features our country’s only “nursery herd,” a group of fossilized Columbian mammoth females and their babies. They appear to have been caught in a creek bed that rapidly filled with water, the mommies positioned as if they’re trying to protect their babies.

That’s just what a good mother does (fathers, too, but their day is next month). And while God refers to Himself with a masculine pronoun throughout Scripture, He demonstrates traditionally maternal characteristics, too, as noted in this tender passage:

As one whom a mother comforts, so will I [God] comfort you.
                                             (Isaiah 66:13)