Yellowstone National Park has done it again.
After setting an attendance record in August of more than 920,000 recreational visitors, it’s set a record for September as well.
That number is 872,695 recreation visits, a National Park Service news release on Tuesday said. It’s a 4% increase from September 2020.
Perhaps even more notable is the record number of visitors year-to-date.
So far in 2021, Yellowstone has seen 4,463,599 recreation visits, up 32% from the same period in 2020. It’s as if the entire state of Oregon visited Yellowstone and invited along more than 200,000 friends.
It’s the first time the park has exceeded the 4-million-visitor mark this early in the year, even before the pandemic, NPS said.
Busy, busy, busy
“Never in Yellowstone’s history have we seen such substantial visitation increases in such a short amount of time,” said Superintendent Cam Sholly in the news release.
“We will continue working with our teams and partners to develop and implement appropriate short- and long-term actions for managing increasing visitation across the park.”
This announcement comes as no surprise to people who have been part of the huge waves trying to gain entrance to popular national parks for months now.
Along with others across the country, Arches National Park in Utah saw such huge influxes earlier this summer that it had to temporarily close its gates on numerous days.
Even into October, Arches still warns potential visitors that “parking lots at trailheads may fill before 9 a.m., causing the park to temporarily restrict access until congestion lessens.” Its website said restricted access can last from three to five hours.
Lots of people, lots of wildlife
You shouldn’t count on the crowds thinning out too much for autumn in national parks, the NPS has previously warned, as people are flocking to outdoor spaces after so much time cooped up indoors during the pandemic.
If you plan to enjoy Yellowstone, the NPS advises making plans well ahead of time and be ready share the space with other travelers.
More people means more potential wildlife encounters gone bad, too. The NPS says keep a minimum of 25 yards (23 meters) from all wildlife and 100 yards (91 meters) from bears and wolves.
NPS takes this warning seriously. Last week, a 25-year-old woman was sentenced to four days in federal custody and steep fines for staying too close to a grizzly bear and her cubs.
Be weather ready
You also need to be ready for all kinds of weather at Yellowstone this time of year. After all, it’s located in northwestern Wyoming and reaches into a bit of Idaho and Montana.
NPS says “snow is common in the spring and fall with regular accumulations of 12 inches.”
in fact, at 6:45 p.m. local time Wednesday, the temperature at the park was a shocking 20 degrees Fahrenheit (almost -7 Celsius).