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Re: Wilderness Permit Information

Posted: Sat Mar 16, 2024 2:22 pm
by SirBC
Wandering Daisy wrote: Sat Mar 16, 2024 11:50 am SirBC, was the $6 a cancellation fee the same fee you paid to get the permit? I recall it is a per person FS fee PLUS a permit administrative cost to reserve.gov. I am trying to figure out if you pay both to get the permit and then additional fee to cancel. So was it: $24 paid, $18 refunded, $6 lost to cancellation. Is the refunded fee put back on your credit card? Or does it become a credit for a future reservation?
I think it was $5 per person and a $6 permit (?) fee, so for the 4 people it was $20 +$6 for $26 total. The $20 was refunded to my credit card but not the $6.

Re: cancellation fees

Posted: Sun Mar 17, 2024 8:30 pm
by Lumbergh21
Wandering Daisy wrote: Sat Mar 16, 2024 9:22 am I have been reading information on permits and trying to figure out if cancellation fees are applied. I am confused about what they call a "$10 cancellation fee" that is "sometimes" applied. Apparently, there is an $8 reserve.gov fee when you apply, which is not refundable. Is there an additional $10 fee if you cancel too close to the entry date? That seems counterproductive if you want to encourage people to cancel when they do not plan to use the permit. Perhaps that only applies to front-country campgrounds? If you change the number in your group, say got a permit for 6 and only 3 are actually going, if you release the three unused permits, does that COST you a change fee?

I guess the real question is: Does doing the right thing by cancelling if not using your permit, cost you extra? If so, why are they punishing people who do the right thing.
I believe the $10 cancellation fee is only for campground reservations (at least that's the only thing that I've seen). You are correct that the Res.gov fee is non-refundable. Finally, yes, if you want to change a wilderness reservation from 6 people to 3 people, Booze Allen will make you pay them more money as a change fee to free up those permits. As far as I know, you can still cancel a permit without paying them more money, but I haven't cancelled a permit since 2020. It's a disgusting government approved shakedown operation where they set the fees and NONE of those fees - that typically exceed the actual park fees - goes towards maintaining the park and facilities.

Re: Wilderness Permit Information

Posted: Sun Mar 17, 2024 9:35 pm
by Wandering Daisy
Well, there is what could be why there are more unused permits with the current system! What a disincentive to free up permit slots that your group does not use, if you get charged for doing the right thing! Not sure the intent, but it is an outrageous, back-door, and sneaky way trail quotas can be reduced without public comment input.

Re: what does "JWT has expired" mean

Posted: Wed Apr 10, 2024 8:17 am
by Wandering Daisy
I am trying to book two trips. The first went fine. Trying to do the second, I had to stop and call Sierra National Forest to clear up a permit pick-up problem. When I got back to reserve, all I get is a message, JWT has expired. I got out and then went back in- the same message. What do I do now?

Re: Wilderness Permit Information

Posted: Wed Apr 10, 2024 8:57 am
by Wandering Daisy
I got back in after turning off the computer and waiting. Is there any way to quit the 15-minute window once it starts?

For other's information, Sierra National Forest allows you to pick up two consecutive permits (mine were from Bear Diversion and Florence Lake) without going back out that horrible road for the second. You just have to call them a few days in advance of your first permit so they can print the second one.

I have always been impressed at how use-friendly Sierra National Forest is. I wish I could say the same for Inyo.

So, now I have my permit for the Meet-Up! And a second 10-day trip to Ionian Basin. One day between for a nice hot shower at Mono Hot Springs.

Re: Wilderness Permit Information

Posted: Thu Apr 11, 2024 4:16 pm
by Harlen
Does anyone know about the road (4wd?) access from Bishop to Horton Lakes trailhead? I can't get through to a person at the USFS office in Bishop. We are considering Horton Lakes as an interesting new way to reach Humphreys Basin, then French Canyon, and on to Bear Basin for the Meetup. It says to take the Buttermilk road, and then 4wd roads from there to get closer to Horton Lakes. Are these "real" 4wd roads, or manageable with cars? We'll have a medium clearance, 6 cylinder van. In the past, I've had pretty good success stradling ruts, and thrashing little cars up to trailheads.

Thanks for the advice.

Re: Non-quota Inyo trailheads question

Posted: Wed May 01, 2024 10:01 am
by Wandering Daisy
It seems like all the non-quota Inyo trailheads have "W" when I checked on a late June dates. So how does one get these permits? Does that mean they can only be obtained short-term a few days before?

Re: Non-quota Inyo trailheads question

Posted: Wed May 01, 2024 10:25 am
by FrankPS
Wandering Daisy wrote: Wed May 01, 2024 10:01 am It seems like all the non-quota Inyo trailheads have "W" when I checked on a late June dates. So how does one get these permits? Does that mean they can only be obtained short-term a few days before?
From the Inyo NF website on Trail Pass (a non-quota trail):

https://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/inyo/re ... ecid=20814

"Reserve up to 2 weeks in advance at www.Recreation.gov"

Re: Wilderness Permit Information

Posted: Wed May 01, 2024 10:26 am
by maverick
So how does one get these permits? Does that mean they can only be obtained short-term a few days before?

Inyo NF:
What Does the "W" Mean?

If you see a W displayed it means additional space will be added for short term reservations two weeks before the trip. at 7am Pacific time. Example: you would look on the recreation.gov website at 7am Pacific Time on the same day of the week, two weeks before your trip entry date.
https://www.fs.usda.gov/main/inyo/passe ... recreation