Andrew H.
Yelp
Deducting stars because Eagle River Nature Center (ERNC) are literal gate keepers.
ERNC is located on public lands.
Specifically, they are in Chugach State Park (CSP).
I happily pay for an annual pass for Alaska State Parks. I have for the past 8 years. I love the parks. I'm even trying to climb every mountain in CSP (currently at 84 of 120).
However, ERNC charges for additional parking fees...your Alaska State Park pass is worth nothing here.
Why? How? How is this even legal?
They also have an annual pass, it's $50. A pass that allows you to access every State Park in the entire state, INCLUDING CSP...upon which ERNC is located in, is $60. $50 to access a single trailhead in a single State Park while accessing EVERY STATE PARK IN THE STATE is $60 is highway robbery!
A line of questioning you would reasonably ask me might go something like this:
But, Andrew, didn't you give them 5-stars before?!
Yes, I did!
But, weren't they charging $5 then, too?
They were but, I honestly had no idea they were. And, probably because of COVID, I was miraculously never ticketed and kept blissfully unaware. I found out when, with a 55lb pack strapped to by back after 30 minutes of prep in at my car...I finally set out to climb Yukla (which I was nervous about) and a volunteer from ERNC stopped me on the trial and made me go back and pay $5/day for the honor of parking while I camped in the backcountry. It was so jarring that I accidentally left my card in the credit card machine.
Some questions you might be wondering about them:
What is that money even going to, what does your $50/year get you?
A gift shop, where they sell goods to tourists and the people that work there are largely volunteers? (which was closed during COVID)
Yurts and cabins that are already expensive?
A few miles of overly graded trails?
It seems so ridiculous to park here and pay $5/day and not use any of these silly "perks" ERNC provides.
Get the money by increasing gift shop prices, or yurt/cabin prices, or even charge more for an Alaska State Park pass. Or, hell, really beef up services! Serve beer and wine, have a foodtruck, employ security to prevent break-ins. Give me SOMETHING useful for this outrageous stacked charge. All are better options than nickel and diming Alaskans for land that belongs to everyone...and that they already pay a lot of money to access via an existing park pass.
Crazy that Alaska tolerates people literally blocking and charging money for the public to access public lands. (the other, way more egregious examples of this are Matanuska Glacier and, to some extent, Ram Valley (RIP))