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ParkWise > Students > Park Facts > Denali

Frequently Asked Questions about
Denali National Park and Preserve

 

Q. How do people travel in Denali National Park?

A. People can travel in the park by foot, dogsled, bus, airplane, and boat. There is a no-car rule, but it has five basic exceptions:

  1. People staying at Teklanika Campground are allowed to drive in at the beginning of their stay and out at the end of it but cannot use their cars while at the campground and may not drive further than the campground.
  2. Professional photographers are given special permits to practice their trade. Applicants must have published photographs in publications with a large distribution. Only five permits are granted per day.
  3. Individuals owning property in Kantishna are able to use the road to access their land since the road provides the only access for vehicles. The Kantishna exception also includes family, friends, and invited guests of these landowners as well as employees of businesses in the town.
  4. Researchers who need vehicles are sometimes allowed to drive cars on the road.
  5. People with severe physical disabilities who cannot take the regular or wheelchair accessible buses.

In addition, Park Service employees drive the road to perform maintenance and law enforcement duties. Rangers living inside the road-restricted area of the park are given a limited number of permits to drive out.

Q. Who gets special access to Denali National Park?

A. Back to the Park Service mission: preservation a and access. Professional photographers allow thousands of people to experience the park even if they are never able to visit. They also provide the park with free publicity. Professional photographers also donate slides to the park slide file.

Q. How much snow does Denali National Park get?

A. Headquarters gets an average of 80 inches a year, but it can vary from as little as 13 inches to as much as 174 inches.

Q. Is there fishing in Denali National Park?

A. Sure, and you don't even need a license. Problem is that there are very few fish. Glacial silt in the rivers discourages fish from inhabiting the river water along the park road. You may find an occasional clear stream with grayling such as Caribou Creek or Hogan Creek. There is also lake trout in Wonder Lake.

Q. Is there hunting allowed in Denali National Park?

A. No sport hunting is allowed inside either the wilderness area or the new park boundary. Sport hunting is allowed in the Preserve, but that area is not accessible by bus. Subsistence hunting for individuals possessing subsistence permits is allowed inside the new park, but not inside the wilderness area.

Q. Is the Denali National Park road open in winter?

A. No. It is open as far as Teklanika until the park gets its first snow, but then it is closed at Headquarters.

Q. How long does the Denali National Park road stay open?

A. It is open for buses from Memorial Day weekend through about the second week in September (variable). Usually there is a short period during which private vehicles are allowed to drive the road in the third week of September. This privilege is granted by lottery. Inquiry at the VC for details or refer to the Alpenglow.

Q. Do the river beds ever fill up during spring melt-off?

A. No. Denali's river beds never fill up. There is never enough water to fill the entire bed. Denali's rivers are known as braided rivers because they are always in several channels. Most of the rivers in the park begin at glaciers. As a result they carry a large amount of silt. As the rivers flow the silt is deposited. Over time the silt builds up to the point that it changes the course of the river. Thus, the river is always changing but always in channels on the river bed.

Q. What do sheep eat?

A. Sheep eat a variety of different plant species. Many of the tundra plants (such as Dryas sp.) are evergreen so that they don't have to waste the short growing season sprouting new leaves each year. These evergreen plants provide the sheep a year round source of nutrients and energy.

Q. Do the sheep stay up high in the mountains in the winter?

A. Yes. Since the sheep's chief defense from predators is its maneuverability on steep slopes, it is important for them to stay high during the winter while wolves are hunting large prey packs. They usually move off the northern slopes of the Alaska Range and into the Outer Range where it snows less and it is easier to paw through to find food.

Q. What is the difference between black and white spruce?

A. Black and white spruce are two different species of tree which can look so much alike it is difficult to tell the difference outside of a laboratory. The following are indicators which may help differentiate the two:

  1. Habitat. White spruce thrive in well-drained areas while black spruce can only compete on bogs or on moist ground.
  2. Size of cones. Black spruce cones are smaller.
  3. Shape. White spruce have a Christmas tree shape while black spruce look more like pipe cleaners.

Q. How many bears are in Denali National Park?

A. No biological surveys have been conducted, but the grizzly population has been estimated at 200-300. We know even less about black bears.

Q. Are there any black bears in Denali National Park?

A. Yes, but you are unlikely to see them. The park road travels through grizzly habitat and black bears cannot compete. An occasional black bear has been spotted in forested patches along the road.

Q. Do you control game populations in Denali National Park?

A. No. Denali National Park is an intact ecosystem. Natural balances are allowed to reign unaltered by people. In the park, we prefer to call animals "wildlife" rather than game.

Q. Why are some areas of Denali National Park closed?

A. Closures exist to protect both people and wildlife. Areas with a high risk of bear danger - around a kill, for instance - are closed. Denning or nesting sites are also protected along with any other resource where managers feel it is important for animals and vegetation to be undisturbed.

Q. How many rangers work in Denali National Park?

A. There are approximately 141 summer employees in Denali. In winter, there are 100 permanent employees plus a handful of temporary staff.

Q. What kind of wolves are in Denali National Park?

A. The wolves in Denali are commonly called gray wolves. The scientific name is Canis lupis. This is the same animal seen in the upper peninsula of Michigan or Minnesota. However, in those areas the commonly used name is timber wolf. The only other species of wolf in the U.S. is the red wolf found in southeast states.

Q. What is the difference between caribou and reindeer?

A. Caribou and reindeer are the same species, Rangifer tarandus. Reindeer are the European subspecies, tending to be smaller and domesticated. Reindeer were introduced to the Seward peninsula of Alaska a few decades ago and are now flourishing there.

Q. Is there elk or deer in Denali National Park?

A. Denali has only two members of the deer family, moose and caribou.

Q. Are there any bald eagles in Denali National Park?

A. Only an occasional one passing overhead. Bald eagles are fish eaters and the park has virtually no fish.

Q. Does Denali National Park have a problem with poaching?

A. The park does have some poaching problems. Most poaching occurs just inside the park boundaries and can involve either aerial or ground-based hunters. There are two to three know occurrences each year. Poaching activity tends to concentrate along the south boundary of the park.

Q. Does the Park Service limit the number of planes and helicopters flying over the park?

A. No. In Alaska, the National Park Service has no authority to regulate its own airspace. At Denali, we have an informal agreement with local helicopters and small plane tour operators to stay within certain travel corridors and 500 feet above the ground.