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Crowds Are Smaller, But No-Shows Have Plagued Oregon Wilderness Permit System

North Sister from Tam McArthur Rim near Bend, Ore., Oct. 9, 1994.
Tom Iraci
North Sister from Tam McArthur Rim near Bend, Ore., Oct. 9, 1994.

More than half the people who bought Central Cascades Wilderness Permits before the season started never showed up to hike.

A new program launched this year to cut crowds at some of the most heavily trafficked trails in Oregon may have cut them a little too much.

When Central Cascades Wilderness Permits went on sale this past April, many of them were gone in a flash. And it turns out, most of the people who bought those permits never actually showed up.

Preliminary data from the U.S. Forest Service indicates about 52% of people who bought permits before the start of the season were no-shows, effectively barring would-be wilderness users from entry.

鈥淪ome people are arguing it鈥檚 great for the resource, but it really limited access to the wilderness,鈥 said Jason Fisher, wilderness specialist for the Deschutes National Forest. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not trying to block people out of these areas.鈥

Overcrowding is a problem facing natural areas from to . The permit system in the Central Cascades is an .

The system at 19 of the most popular trailheads in the Three Sisters, Mount Washington and Mount 老夫子传媒 wilderness areas on any given day.

鈥淣o one鈥檚 really undertaken this scope of a project,鈥 Fisher said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a big bite, so to speak.鈥

Despite the no-shows, Fisher called the permit system鈥檚 inaugural year 鈥減retty successful鈥 overall. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e gonna see people, but you鈥檙e not in a conga line,鈥 he said.

Several people told OPB they saw far fewer people on trails this year than in years past and that that was a good thing.

鈥淸W]hen camping we got good sites and didn鈥檛 need to create new ones, and the overall experience of being in the wilderness was better not having a ton of people,鈥 said Eric Holscher from Bend, in an email.

At the same time, Holscher and others also expressed concern about no-shows unfairly boxing people out of the wilderness.

People who bought permits before the start of the season were less likely to show than people who bought them as they came available throughout the summer. Still, 27% of people who made reservations during seven-day rolling windows were also no-shows, according to the Forest Service data.

The numbers won鈥檛 be final until after the permit season ends Friday, but Fisher said the Forest Service is already searching for ways to fix the no-show issue before next year.

Some hikers have suggested selling more permits to account for no-shows or creating more incentive for people to cancel reservations.

The Forest Service reported more than 57,000 people entered the wilderness with day-use permits this summer.

The agency issued more than 10,000 overnight permits for about 22,000 people. The average overnight group size was 3.8 people who stayed an average of 2.1 nights.

The Forest Service issued 13 violations, filed more than 330 incident reports and issued 315 verbal warnings 鈥 not all of which were related to permits.

Copyright 2021 Oregon Public Broadcasting. To see more, visit .