[pct-l] What areas are off-limits for dogs?

patti kulesz peprmintpati88 at yahoo.com
Tue Feb 24 00:08:23 CST 2009


hmm pretty crazy cuz when I was in Yosemite coming from Curry Village to Mammoth where we started...I was on teh YAARTS bus and there was a dog on there...maybe they have changed it in the past two years I don't know. Dogs are also allowed on the shuttle that goes from Mammoth to Agnews, Red's and Devil's Postpile..but that's stated on the site for that area...as long as they are well behaved and leashed. But there was a white dog on the YAARTS for sure two years ago going to Mammoth

patti

--- On Mon, 2/23/09, AsABat <AsABat at 4Jeffrey.Net> wrote:

From: AsABat <AsABat at 4Jeffrey.Net>
Subject: RE: [pct-l] What areas are off-limits for dogs?
To: "'patti kulesz'" <peprmintpati88 at yahoo.com>, pct-l at backcountry.net
Date: Monday, February 23, 2009, 9:09 PM



Source? I'm not doubting it's possible, but thinking we need sources as
this comes up a lot. What I found is at
http://www.nps.gov/yose/planyourvisit/pets.htm :

Pets are only allowed 
* in developed areas 
* on fully paved trails and roads 
* in campgrounds (except Tamarack Flat, Porcupine Flat, and walk-in
campgrounds) 

Pets are not allowed 
* on unpaved or poorly paved trails 
* in Wilderness areas 
* on shuttle buses 
* in concessioner lodging areas 
* in Tamarack Flat, Porcupine Flat, and all walk-in campgrounds 
* in any group or horse camps

They also list a few unpaved roads that allow dogs.



> -----Original Message-----
> From: patti kulesz [mailto:peprmintpati88 at yahoo.com]
> Sent: Monday, February 23, 2009 8:40 PM
> To: pct-l at backcountry.net; AsABat
> Subject: Re: [pct-l] What areas are off-limits for dogs?
> 
> Actually in Yosemite...dogs are allowed on the JMT up to Donahue Pass
and
> then i think if I remember right u have to back track a little and
take
> another trail to Tuolumne where the dogs can stay at the camp as long
as
> they're not in the group camp. There are actually designated trails
for
> them in Yosemite, which are more like dirt roads....but they are
allowed
> out there in some places. Also they are allowed to go on the Devil's
> Postpile trail...but we thru hikers aren't...nice huh? LOL
> 
> so if u want to check that out u have to shower and look respectable
> first. I found that out last Sept when  I was hiking from there to
Lake of
> the Lone Indian...doing a loop back...met a JMT hiker and he said the
> trail actually used to go through Devil's Postpile but they changed it
to
> go around the Postpile b/c the tourist were getting offended by our
> stench...the nerve eh?
> 
> patti
> 
> --- On Mon, 2/23/09, AsABat <AsABat at 4Jeffrey.Net> wrote:
> 
> From: AsABat <AsABat at 4Jeffrey.Net>
> Subject: Re: [pct-l] What areas are off-limits for dogs?
> To: pct-l at backcountry.net
> Date: Monday, February 23, 2009, 7:56 PM
> 
> A quick google for a start found this info on the respective park
> brochures:
> 
> 
> NATIONAL PARKS:
> 
> SeKi, Yosemite, and Lassen - no dogs on trails
> 
> Lassen NP - no dogs on trails
> 
> Crater Lake NP - could not find answer
> 
> Mt Rainer NP - dogs allowed on PCT only if on leash, not allowed on
> other trails
> 
> 
> 
> CALIFORNIA STATE PARKS:
> 
> Anza-Borrego Desert - no dogs on trails
> -(from roughly Garnet Peak (north of Noble Canyon) to around Third
Gate
> in San Felipe Hills)
> 
> Mt. San Jacinto Wilderness - no dogs in wilderness
> -(state park only - Deer Springs Trail to halfway down Fuller Ridge)
> 
> Lake Silverwood - no dogs on swim beaches
> 
> MacArthur-Burney Falls - no dogs on trails (except Pioneer Cemetery
> Trail and Old Rim Camp Road)
> 
> Castle Crags - no dogs on trails (except Campground Trail)
> 
> 
> Maybe others can complete this list and add it to the FAQ.
> 
> AsABat
> 
> 
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