Shenandoah tracks. Everyone goes for the fall photos. Even I did.
Disastrous-Year571 on
Pattern makes sense – hottest climate parks in the spring or fall, most of the parks in the summer with the northernmost being August rather than June or July, and some of those known for fall colors in the fall.
Lord_of_the_Canals on
I like this visualization it’s neat!
agate_ on
You know what would make this cooler? An inner ring that showed the *minimum* visitation, so you could see how variable each park is. I’m sure attendance at the parks in Alaska and Maine drop to nearly zero in February, while Hawaii Volcanoes is popular year-round, but I bet there are some patterns that might surprise you.
miclugo on
This is an interesting visualization and it’s based on an interesting data set.
It also would be nice to see some indicator of the strength of the seasonality, which is a complaint I have about a lot of visualizations that say when something peaks. Nobody goes to Acadia in winter. Biscayne, on the other hand, did have a July peak in 2024 but in some recent years has peaked in May, and isn’t all that far from being flat over the course of the year. And some parks have two peaks, either spring and fall because the summer is just too hot (e.g. Congaree, the Utah parks) or summer and leaf-peepers (Great Smoky Mountains and Shenandoah have a fall peak and a smaller summer peak; New River Gorge is the other way around).
Maybe I should do it myself instead of complaining that someone on the Internet didn’t do exactly the thing I want.
renaissance-Fartist on
I wish I could more easily tell the difference between the 1000, 10,000, and the 50000 size dot on sight.
I went to the website to look at the Voyageurs data, trying to see if it was 1000 or 10,000, and to my surprise it was 50,000.
This is super cool though! I’m in MN so this got me legit interested in two new places to see
RedundantSwine on
I went to Big Bend in March. I feel included.
LetsLearnSomeScience on
Gateway Arch has absolutely no business being a National Park.
ComprehensivePen3227 on
I get why Smoky Mountain National Park is the most-visited National Park in the country (being the largest national park near the East Coast and also frickin gorgeous), but why is it so much more heavily visited than Shenandoah given that Shenandoah is so much closer to the Northeast metroplex? The Smokies had something like 23.0 visitors per acre last year, whereas Shenandoah only had 8.5, even though Shenandoah is 5.5ish hours closer to DC, Philly, New York, etc. by car and is still fairly sizeable.
Vin-Metal on
I recommend the Smokies in spring, when the ephemeral wildflowers are in bloom
TheMurmuring on
My first impulse on reading “visitation” was that this was some kind of UFO conspiracy shit.
DigNitty on
Love this font
except don’t know why the creator chose to have lowercase J’s not have any tail on the end. You can see it in the Alaskan Fjords park. the j looks like an extra long i.
Not OP’s fault obviously. Just think it’s a bizarre font design choice. The f’s get a little upper tail, the j’s should get a lower one.
13 Comments
Source: https://www.nps.gov/subjects/socialscience/visitor-use-statistics-dashboard.htm
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Shenandoah tracks. Everyone goes for the fall photos. Even I did.
Pattern makes sense – hottest climate parks in the spring or fall, most of the parks in the summer with the northernmost being August rather than June or July, and some of those known for fall colors in the fall.
I like this visualization it’s neat!
You know what would make this cooler? An inner ring that showed the *minimum* visitation, so you could see how variable each park is. I’m sure attendance at the parks in Alaska and Maine drop to nearly zero in February, while Hawaii Volcanoes is popular year-round, but I bet there are some patterns that might surprise you.
This is an interesting visualization and it’s based on an interesting data set.
It also would be nice to see some indicator of the strength of the seasonality, which is a complaint I have about a lot of visualizations that say when something peaks. Nobody goes to Acadia in winter. Biscayne, on the other hand, did have a July peak in 2024 but in some recent years has peaked in May, and isn’t all that far from being flat over the course of the year. And some parks have two peaks, either spring and fall because the summer is just too hot (e.g. Congaree, the Utah parks) or summer and leaf-peepers (Great Smoky Mountains and Shenandoah have a fall peak and a smaller summer peak; New River Gorge is the other way around).
Maybe I should do it myself instead of complaining that someone on the Internet didn’t do exactly the thing I want.
I wish I could more easily tell the difference between the 1000, 10,000, and the 50000 size dot on sight.
I went to the website to look at the Voyageurs data, trying to see if it was 1000 or 10,000, and to my surprise it was 50,000.
This is super cool though! I’m in MN so this got me legit interested in two new places to see
I went to Big Bend in March. I feel included.
Gateway Arch has absolutely no business being a National Park.
I get why Smoky Mountain National Park is the most-visited National Park in the country (being the largest national park near the East Coast and also frickin gorgeous), but why is it so much more heavily visited than Shenandoah given that Shenandoah is so much closer to the Northeast metroplex? The Smokies had something like 23.0 visitors per acre last year, whereas Shenandoah only had 8.5, even though Shenandoah is 5.5ish hours closer to DC, Philly, New York, etc. by car and is still fairly sizeable.
I recommend the Smokies in spring, when the ephemeral wildflowers are in bloom
My first impulse on reading “visitation” was that this was some kind of UFO conspiracy shit.
Love this font
except don’t know why the creator chose to have lowercase J’s not have any tail on the end. You can see it in the Alaskan Fjords park. the j looks like an extra long i.
Not OP’s fault obviously. Just think it’s a bizarre font design choice. The f’s get a little upper tail, the j’s should get a lower one.