A National Tantrum at a National Park
“You’re in such a gorgeous
place. Why are you complaining about stupid stuff?”
By Tiya Miles
DECEMBER 21, 2022
The first time I
saw Yellowstone National Park, that otherworldly American place, I was in the
mood to celebrate. My husband and I had just had our 1-and-a-half-year-old
twins baptized on the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation in Montana, where he’s
from, and decided to drive the five hours to Yellowstone. It was a happy end to
a trying first year as new parents to premature and sometimes sickly twins. We
bathed the kids in the cabin sink, ate cheap meals of cereal and sandwiches,
and pushed the double stroller along the easiest trails. The land flashed with
sublime light, even if the human history of the park’s formation—the expulsion
of Indigenous peoples and poor white trappers to make way for environmental
conservation and commercial tourism—cast flickering shadows. Those days stand
out in technicolor in my memory: our toddling daughters in their
watermelon-pink and tangerine-orange short sets, the blue pools and hot
rainbow-hued mists, the green-winged hummingbirds so small that we at first
mistook them for insects, the bison in their rugged coats.
We’ve been going back
to Yellowstone ever since, eventually adding a third child to the cacophonous,
long-distance car rides. Now we always stay at the Old Faithful Inn, the
historic lodge near the Old Faithful geyser. We missed a year during the first
phase of the coronavirus pandemic, and when we returned last summer with three
teenagers, we were met by a surprising sight. In the lobby were posted large
signs begging guests to be nice. good nature. we’re all about it. and so are our loyal
employees. In bold letters: please be kind to them.
Yellowstone had
always been a place where our family found an unspoken camaraderie in the
pleasant company of those who were, like us, delighted to be in that stunning
surround, which somehow put human problems into planetary perspective. Had the
tone at the park—the first of its kind in our nation’s history—changed so much
that visitors had to be told to treat others with respect?
Since the pandemic,
there have been reports of increased road rage, of people throwing tantrums in stores and on airplanes. America’s grandest natural spaces
have not been immune to the contagion of anger. In this sense, the national
parks may be more national than we realized.
Mike Keller, the
general manager of Yellowstone National Park Lodges at Xanterra, a private
company that operates all public lodgings and most concessions in Yellowstone,
told me he sees far more good interactions than bad. But lately “when it goes
sideways,” he said, “it goes really aggressively really quickly.” Keller
recounted a shocking range of rude and abusive behaviors displayed by park
visitors at the expense of employees, from the use of profanity, to calling
them “morons,” to one instance of a guest shoving a worker. “I don’t want to
make it sound like we’re in a killing zone here,” he told me. But he believes
Americans have “lost our civility.”
This year was
Yellowstone’s 150th anniversary. Celebrations coincided with all the stresses
of the pandemic—mask-mandate politicization, supply-chain disruptions, staffing
shortages, and ballooning numbers of visitors. And, oh yes, in June there was a
500-year flood that necessitated an evacuation and shut the park down for nine
days. Any one of these factors would have been challenging enough. Combined,
they made for a punishing trial that left some employees at the park shaken and
tearful. As it turns out, Yellowstone’s sesquicentennial is highlighting not
only the park’s physical majesty and cultural history, but also the present-day
frailties of the nation that brought it into being.
Rick hoeninghausen,
the director of sales and marketing for Xanterra’s Yellowstone Park Lodges, has
worked at the park for 30 years. He met his wife there in the ’80s. He, too,
told me that the atmosphere has changed since the pandemic began. He knows park
employees who have been cursed at and spit on. Guests “became very ugly,” he
said. “Some of our agents were in tears because of what people were saying to
them.” The abuse extended to communication online. When one of his colleagues
offered to read and respond to complaint emails in order to buffer her
co-workers, she lasted only a week. The task of wading through the foul
feedback took too much of an emotional toll.
Grace McCray, a sunny
college student, and one of the few people of color outside our own family we
encountered at Yellowstone, was working as the greeter at Old Faithful Inn when
we arrived in June. “I love this place,” she told me. Yet, while working the
front desk and the front door, she was responsible for asking people to put on
a mask before entering the building, in order to comply with the National Park
Service policy that required masks throughout the winter of 2021–22 and,
sporadically, for part of the summer of 2022. She had been yelled and cursed at
by “really furious” people. “That’s not cool,” she said. “Stop yelling at this
girl behind the desk. Like, what kind of person do you have to be to scream at
service people?”
One visitor responded
to McCray’s request that he put on a mask by pointing his camcorder at her and
saying, “How about you take down that mask and shake a little something for
me?” McCray, who is, in her own words, “a little woman,” felt intimidated. “Big
men yelling at me is something I have a problem with,” she said, after telling
the story of another man who addressed her in language so rude that she would
not repeat it. At the time we visited, masks were not mandatory inside, and
interactions at the entryway were less strained. But, she said, “it was pretty
wild for a while.”
McCray tried, at
first, to prepare herself by anticipating who among the guests streaming in
might yell at her. But it was hard to guess. Although she noticed people
wearing political paraphernalia (she did not say, but I assumed that she meant
MAGA hats and the like), she said that incivility could be traced to no
particular “type” of visitor. Instead, the animosity seemed generalized. Almost
anyone, from the low-budget backpacker to the high-brow sightseer, seemed
capable of boiling over.
Manners are being abandoned at
other Montana havens. In Glacier National Park, about 400 miles to the
northwest, rude visitors have left employees crying too. Similar signs have had
to be posted, pleading for civility. When we visited Eddie’s Cafe, a historic,
family-owned park concession in Apgar Village along glistening Lake McDonald,
in August, a sign read: the whole world is short staffed. be patient & kind to those who are
working hard and showing up. The manager there, Catie McLaughlin, told
me the sign had been posted in the summer of 2021 and then taken down, until a
park visitor made a staff member cry in 2022. The sign went back up again.
“People are just so mean,” McLaughlin said. Then she smiled and drew my attention
to a chubby marmot hustling past us in the grass.
McLaughlin has worked
in hospitality for years but she said that, since the pandemic, “everyone was
on edge, will snap at you for literally nothing.” People are more impatient now
and prepared to complain about minor and even entirely predictable
inconveniences, such as unstable Wi-Fi connections in the remote mountains.
“You’re on the deck, with a view of Lake McDonald, screaming at your
19-year-old server about your French fries not being crispy enough. You’re in
such a gorgeous place. Why are you complaining about stupid stuff?”
Keller, the general
manager of Yellowstone’s lodges and cabins, has thought a lot about that “why.”
The masking requirement was especially emotional, bringing a blistering political
fight into park borders. The last thing guests who were already resentful of
mandates and suspicious of federal authorities wanted to hear while on their
get-away-from-it-all wilderness vacation was that they had to mask up. “I’ve
had some guests be brutally rude to our employees,” he said. “To this kid
making $13 an hour. They’re the face. They’re the person that gets this vitriol
thrown at them. They accuse them of being liberal, which they aren’t … some of
them aren’t.”
Many guests had to
delay or rebook their vacations because of the pandemic. They were already
logistically and financially strained by the time they arrived. Staffing
shortages led to longer wait times; supply-chain shortages meant my kids’
favorite ice-cream flavors could no longer be found at the soda fountain. Many
employees mentioned how the lack of reliable internet access enraged travelers
during the pandemic. Guests quickly lost patience with some of the quirky
features that had once been, arguably, among the charms of Yellowstone and
Glacier.
The crowds
exacerbated the tension. The traffic slowdowns around wildlife sightings, known
as “bear jams” and “bison jams,” have gotten much longer. Naaman Horn, a
National Park Service spokesperson, told me that Yellowstone’s busiest year on
record was 2021, with more than 4.8 million visits recorded.
Bozeman, the largest
city near Yellowstone, is also booming. Our family has lived there on and off
since 2014, when my husband accepted a visiting professorship in the Native
American–studies program at Montana State University. As remote work became
more common for a privileged subset of the population, pretty, friendly college
towns like Bozeman drew thousands of new residents. Many newcomers came from
urban and coastal areas and had more racially plural backgrounds than Bozeman’s
longer-standing residents. Other newcomers were white and more conservative,
drawn to the area, many locals speculate, by the popularity of the hit show Yellowstone.
While perusing the
local magazine Bozeman City Lifestyle earlier this year, I
realized there was trouble in this paradise too. I came across a story about an
initiative called Outside Kind that reminded me of the “be
nice” signs popping up at the parks. The initiative is sponsored by One
Montana, an organization that focuses on bridging urban-rural divides, and
several partner organizations. Sarah Davies Tilt, the executive director of One
Montana, told me that the goal is to educate about outdoor-space use and
decrease conflict between newcomers and longtime residents, which has been on
the rise as more people elbow past one another on crowded trails. The group
tries to promote a “sense of place and a sense of tradition and history” that
it calls the “Montana Way.”
Judith Heilman shares
Tilt’s concerns. A Black woman with short salt-and-pepper natural hair and a
hearty hug, she founded the Montana Racial Equity Project in 2015 and was the
director until her retirement this summer. On a clear afternoon in July, I
visited Heilman at her Bozeman home. We sat in her kitchen looking out over her
acreage as the breeze made the aspens sing, and she told me about how the
influx of people from larger cities leads to communication misfires. “A lot of
people come in from the larger cities … With that sort of population density
comes a feeling that you need to be on internet time.” She snapped her fingers
in staccato fashion to illustrate. “Everything has to just be done now, or
yesterday, or two hours ago … And people don’t have time for one another. And
they don’t have time for just the general niceties of politeness.”
Heilman believes that
by slowing down and working to connect with others, you can build a better
community. She’s friends with Bozeman’s chief of police, who is white, and the
two of them read books about contemporary social issues together in a cozy book
group that could serve as a model for law-enforcement and racial-justice
leaders nationwide. They read new books such as Heather McGhee’s The
Sum of Us, and older hits such as Ibram X. Kendi’s Stamped From the
Beginning, which was, Heilman said, “the first book the chief read” with
her. Heilman enjoyed watching her friend discover this complex history. “For
me, Stamped was affirming,” she said. “For the chief, it was
revelatory.”
Two days later, I met
with Tilt at a café across from the public library on Bozeman’s Main Street,
ringed by mountain views. She was wearing a cheerful T-shirt that read: you can’t make everyone
happy. you’re not an avocado, and jokingly called the part of the town
most reflective of urban growth “Boze-Angeles.” It’s hard, she said, to
integrate these new community members. “Changing behaviors takes time.” The
Outside Kind alliance has produced specific encouragements and instructions for
people to Ski Kind, Hike Kind, Wag Kind, and so on. Tilt, who is a bird hunter,
says they also have a Hunt Kind program, to encourage hunters to exude friendliness
on the trail, where they may encounter people who are intimidated by the sight
of firearms. Transplants to the city and trails need to understand that “these
aren’t assault weapons,” she said. Outside Kind starts with the basics,
encouraging people to smile and say hello.
Ididn’t know whether
to be happy that such a program existed, or sad that it had come to this.
Americans who have survived all manner of turmoil over the past six years are
drawn to this Western landscape to escape urban congestion, coldness, and
COVID, but we are bringing these maladies with us. Because in the end, there is
no escaping our national culture. Our country is frayed and frazzled, cynical
and suspicious, and raring for a fight. Even our so-called best idea, our
breathtaking national parks, can’t save us from ourselves.
And yet. Everyone I
spoke with about the horror stories of the past few years wanted to end the
conversation on a different note: They all insisted on telling one last story
that emphasized the positive. Grace McCray was on door duty the day of the
terrifying flood, and was put in charge of evacuating the Old Faithful Inn.
When the inn was empty for the next several days, McCray experienced the
natural magic of a nearly peopleless Yellowstone Park. The beauty and peace
restored her spirit. Rick Hoeninghausen told me about watching the 2017 solar
eclipse from a boat on Yellowstone Lake, and we realized with quiet delight
that we had been proximate strangers in that moment, as my family and I had
watched the eclipse from the shore.
Mike Keller told what
he called a “bad-to-good story,” in which he was recently summoned to the
Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel where a “belligerent guest” was “screaming at the top
of his lungs” at employees. When Keller coaxed the man into a private office
and urged him to take a seat, he was stunned to see the man burst into tears,
“crying, sobbing, and shaking.” Keller handed the man a tissue, let him cry,
and then asked how he could help. Apologetic and embarrassed, the man admitted,
“I can’t go back to my car, to my wife and kids, and tell them I booked the
wrong night.”
While too many
Americans have been making park employees cry, the guests are breaking down
too. In the end, Keller found that family a room. In turn, the staff received a
heartfelt letter of gratitude. After all, as Grace McCray told me, “it’s still
Yellowstone.”
Tiya
Miles is a history professor and Radcliffe Alumnae Professor at
the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard. Her latest book is All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black
Family Keepsake.