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Summer crowds at Yosemite's Half Dome

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Staff
About 1 pages (299 words)

AP Features, July 16th, 2007

Hordes of tourists are clogging the cable handrails on the slope leading up Yosemite's iconic Half Dome, delaying climbers and frustrating serious athletes who say the unprepared masses have made the hike unpleasant and downright dangerous, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

The number of weekend and holiday Half Dome climbers has increased 30 percent since the mid-1990s, according to park officials. In the past year, three people have been killed on the grueling 8.6-mile hike, which begins in the Yosemite Valley and ascends to the 8,842-foot Half Dome.

The most recent fatality was June 16, when Japanese native Hirofumi Nohara, 37, lost his footing and slid off the side of Half Dome while horrified climbers watched.

Outdoor enthusiasts say accidents could increase as more day trippers attempt the climb in inappropriate garb _ sneakers and sandals instead of hiking boots, saggy jeans instead of climbing pants, handheld water bottles instead of canteens in backpacks. They also say some climbers are too old, young or unfit to climb the trail, which has numerous warning signs, gains 4,733 feet and concludes with a 400-foot, nearly 50-degree slope of slick granite.

The summit has been a climbing challenge since Oct. 12, 1875, when George Anderson drilled iron eyebolts and rope into the dome and reached the top. The Sierra Club installed the steel cables in 1919.

An average 12 people die in Yosemite annually. The three people who died in the past year were the only fatalities on Half Dome in decades, park spokeswoman Adrienne Freeman said. Others were the result of heart attacks, lightning strikes or parachute accidents.

But park officials acknowledge that more inexperienced climbers are trying to get to the summit without proper clothes or preparation. Rangers will begin collecting data on crowding and other issues next year.

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Staff. Summer crowds at Yosemite's Half Dome. Copyright 2007  AP Features.

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