In Yellowstone, the person who wrote the travel journal mentioned it was overcrowded...
That person probably didn't go far from the parking lots.... Yellowstone covers 9,000 km² (bigger than Corsica), so there's plenty of space ;)
I wanted to hike in the US in the Grand Canyon like I do in our Alps. (Écrins, Beaufortin, Belledonne, Chartreuse, Vercors, etc.)
You can absolutely hike in the US, but on a different scale. Besides the national parks, which have a paid entrance, there are plenty of national forests and state parks that are free.
I live in a village in the Vercors. If I want to hike for several days (in the nature park, which is over 17,000 hectares), I’ve led groups there multiple times. No need for reservations or entrance tickets...
I live at the foot of Mont Blanc—I know the mountains ;) But you’re trying to compare the incomparable! 170 km² for the Vercors nature park versus 5,000 km² for the Grand Canyon! US national parks are highly regulated, and yes, they’re paid. But nature in the US isn’t limited to these parks.
I go wherever I want without restrictions. In the evening, we can camp anywhere.
Even in France, especially in nature parks, wild camping is regulated ;) You’re not free to camp everywhere. In US national forests and state parks, wild camping is possible, but not in the Grand Canyon ;)
I booked (for safety) a refuge one day’s hike from our starting point (trekking), but on the day we were supposed to leave, there were violent storms, and we were forced to stay put. Luckily, the very nice Albanians running the "refuge" understood our situation and didn’t charge us for the stay...
I don’t think it would’ve gone the same way in the US...
On the contrary, I think it *would* have gone the same way in the US—and certainly elsewhere too—if violent storms had prevented you from reaching the refuge!
A few euros? I was initially considering Grand Teton National Park, which really inspires me with those mountains in the background in Mitch341’s photo...
I checked booking sites, and the cheapest I found was a tent for $115, otherwise all accommodations start at $200.
Usafan was talking about reserving the park entrance (for those who need one), not lodging since they sleep in their car. Entrance reservations usually cost around $2!
And as Usafan so wisely said, stop overthinking it and plan a little trip ;) ... the Vercors will seem tiny when you get back!
Here’s a link to a beautiful forest in Montana where you can camp freely (well, almost!)—just watch out for grizzlies ;)
https://www.fs.usda.gov/r01/flathead/recreation/camping-cabins
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