National Visitor Use
Monitoring Results
June 2004
Region 4
Prepared by:
Susan M. Kocis
Ross Arnold
Larry Warren
Catherine Ruka
Scope
and purpose of the National Visitor Use Monitoring project
CHAPTER
1: SAMPLE DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION
The
NVUM Process and Definition of Terms
Constraints
on Uses of the Results
The
Forest Stratification Results
CHAPTER
2: VISITATION ESTIMATES
Table
2. Annual Salmon- Challis National
Forest recreation use estimate
Table
4. Gender distribution of Salmon-
Challis NF recreation visitors
Table
5. Age distribution of Salmon- Challis
NF recreation visitors
Table
6. Race/ethnicity of Salmon- Challis NF
recreation visitors
Table
7. Most common zip codes of Salmon-
Challis NF recreation visitors
Average
number of people per vehicle and average axle count per vehicle in survey
CHAPTER
3: WILDERNESS VISITORS
Table
8. Age distribution of Salmon- Challis
NF Wilderness visitors
Table
9. Race/ethnicity of Salmon- Challis NF
Wilderness visitors
Table
10. Most common zip codes of Salmon-
Challis NF Wilderness visitors
Table
11. Satisfaction of Salmon- Challis NF
Wilderness Visitors.
CHAPTER
4: DESCRIPTION OF THE VISIT
Table
12. Site visit length of stay (in hours)
by site/type on Salmon- Challis NF
Table
13. Salmon- Challis NF activity
participation and primary activity
Use
of constructed facilities and designated areas
Table
14. Percentage use of facilities and
specially designated areas on Salmon- Challis NF.
Table
15. Substitute behavior choices of
recreation visitors
Average
annual outdoor recreation activity
Table
16. Annual recreation spending for
visitors to the Lincoln NF
Visitor
Satisfaction Information
Table
17. Satisfaction of Salmon- Challis NF
recreation visitors at Developed Day Use sites
Table
18. Satisfaction of Salmon- Challis NF
recreation visitors at Developed Overnight sites
Table
19. Satisfaction of Salmon- Challis NF
recreation visitors in General Forest Areas
Table
21. List of comments received from
Salmon- Challis NF recreation visitors.
The National Visitor Use Monitoring (NVUM) project was
implemented as a response to the need to better understand the use and
importance of and satisfaction with national forest system recreation
opportunities. This level of
understanding is required by national forest plans, Executive Order 12862
(Setting Customer Service Standards), and implementation of the National
Recreation Agenda. To improve public
service, the agency’s Strategic and Annual Performance Plans require measuring
trends in user satisfaction and use levels.
It will assist Congress, Forest Service leaders, and program managers in
making sound decisions that best serve the public and protect valuable natural
resources by providing science based, reliable information about the type,
quantity, quality and location of recreation use on public lands. The information collected is also important
to external customers including state agencies and private industry. NVUM methodology and analysis is explained in
detail in the research paper entitled:
In conjunction with guidelines and recommendations from the Outdoor Recreation Review Commission, the USDA-Forest Service has estimated recreation use and maintained records since the 1950s. Many publications on preferred techniques for estimating recreation use at developed and dispersed recreation sites were sponsored by Forest Service Research Stations and Universities. Implementation of these recommended methodologies takes specific skills, a dedicated work force, and strict adherence to an appropriate sampling plan. The earliest estimates were designed to estimate use at developed fee recreation facilities such as campgrounds. These estimates have always been fairly reliable because they are based upon readily observable, objective counts of items such as a fee envelope.
Prior to the mid-1990s, the Forest Service used its
Recreation Information Management (RIM) system to store and analyze recreation
use information.
In 1998 a group of research and forest staff were appointed to investigate and pilot a recreation sampling system that would be cost effective and provide statistical recreation use information at the forest, regional, and national level. Since that time, a permanent sampling system (NVUM) has been developed. Several Forest Service staff areas including Recreation, Wilderness, Ecosystem Management, Research and Strategic Planning and Resource Assessment are involved in implementing the program. A four-year timeframe of data collection was established for the first sampling cycle, and a five-year timeframe for succeeding cycles. The first sampling cycle was completed in September 2003. The second sampling cycle begins October 2004. This ongoing monitoring effort will provide quality recreation information needed for improving citizen centered recreation services.
This
data can be very useful for forest planning and decision making. The information provided
can be used in economic efficiency analysis that requires providing a value per
National Forest Visit. This can then be
compared to other resource values. The
description of visitor characteristics (age, race, zip code, activity
participation) can help the forest identify the type of recreation niche they
fill. The satisfaction information can
help management decide where best to place limited resources that would result
in improved visitor satisfaction. The
economic expenditure information can help forests show local communities the
employment and income effects of tourism from forest visitors. In addition, the credible use statistics can
be helpful in considering visitor capacity issues.
NVUM has standardized definitions of visitor use measurement to ensure that all national forest visitor measurements are comparable. These definitions are basically the same as established by the Forest Service since the 1970s, however the application of the definition is stricter. Visitors must pursue a recreation activity physically located “on” Forest Service managed land in order to be counted. They cannot be passing through; viewing from non-Forest Service managed roads, or just using restroom facilities. The NVUM basic use measurements are national forest visits and site visits. Along with these use measurements basic statistics, which indicate the precision of the estimate, are given. These statistics include the error rate and associated confidence intervals at the 80 percent confidence level. The definitions of these terms follow.
National forest visit - the entry of one person upon a national forest to participate in recreation activities for an unspecified period of time. A national forest visit can be composed of multiple site visits.
Site visit - the entry of one person onto a national forest site or area to participate in recreation activities for an unspecified period of time.
Recreation trip – the duration of time beginning when the visitor left their home and ending when they got back to their home.
Confidence level -- defines the degree of certainty that a range of values contains the true value of what is being estimated. For example, an 80% confidence level refers to the range of values within which the true value will fall 80% of the time. Higher confidence levels necessarily cover a larger range of values.
Confidence interval width (also called error rate) -
these terms define the reliability of the visit estimates. The confidence level defines the desired
level of certainty. The size of the
interval that is needed to reach that level of certainty is the confidence
interval width. The confidence interval
width is expressed as a percent of the estimate and defines the upper and lower
bounds of the confidence interval. The
smaller the confidence interval, the more precise is the estimate. An 80 percent confidence level is very
acceptable for social science applications at a broad national or forest
scale. For example: There are 205 million national forest visits
plus or minus 3 percent at the 80 percent confidence level. In other words we are 80 percent certain that
the true number of national forest visits lies between 198.85 million and
211.15 million.
To participate in the NVUM process, forests first categorized all recreation sites and areas into five basic categories called “site types”: Day Use Developed Sites (DUDS), Overnight Use Developed Sites (OUDS), Wilderness, General Forest Areas (GFA), and View Corridors (VC). Only the first four categories are considered “true” national forest visits and were included in the estimate provided. Within these broad categories (called site types) every open day of the year for each site/area was rated as high, medium or low last exiting recreation use. Sites/areas that are scheduled to be closed or would have “0” use were also identified. Each day on which a site or area is open is called a site day and is the basic sampling unit for the survey. Results of this forest categorization are shown in Table 1.
A map showing all General Forest Exit locations and View Corridors was prepared and archived with the NVUM data for use in future sample years. NVUM also provided training materials, equipment, survey forms, funding, and the protocol necessary for the forest to gather visitor use information.
NVUM terms used in the site categorization framework are defined below:
Site day - a day that a recreation site or area is open to the public for recreation purposes.
Site types -- stratification of a forest recreation site or area into one of five broad categories as defined in the paper: Forest Service National Visitor Use Monitoring Process: Research Method Documentation, May 2002, English et al. The categories are Day Use Developed sites (DUDS), Overnight Use Developed Sites (OUDS), General Forest Areas (GFA), Wilderness (WILD), and View Corridors (VC). Another category called Off-Forest Recreation Activities (OFRA) was categorized but not sampled.
Proxy – information collected at a recreation site or area that is related to the amount of recreation visitation received. The proxy information must pertain to all users of the site, it must be an exact tally of use and it must be one of the proxy types allowed in the NVUM pre-work directions (fee receipts, fee envelopes, mandatory permits, permanent traffic counters, ticket sales, and daily use records).
Nonproxy – a recreation site or area that does not have proxy information. At these sites a 24-hour traffic count is taken to measure total use for one site day at the sample site.
Use level strata - for either proxy or nonproxy sites, each day that a recreation site or area was open for recreation, the site day was categorized as either high, medium or low last exiting recreation traffic, or closed. Closed was defined as either administratively closed or “0” use. For example Sabino Picnic Area (a DUDS nonproxy site) is closed for 120 days, has high last exiting recreation use on open weekends (70 days) and medium last exiting recreation use on open midweek days (175 days). This accounts for all 365 days of the year at Sabino Picnic area. This process was repeated for every developed site and area on the forest.
The information presented here is valid and applicable at the forest level. It is not designed to be accurate at the district or site level. The quality of the visitation estimate is dependent on the preliminary sample design development, sampling unit selection, sample size and variability, and survey implementation. First, preliminary work conducted by forests to classify sites consistently according to the type and amount of visitation influences the quality of the estimate. Second, visitors sampled must be representative of the population of all visitors. Third, the number of visitors sampled must be large enough to adequately control variability. Finally, the success of the forest in accomplishing its assigned sample days, correctly filling out the interview forms, and following the sample protocol influence the error rate. The error rate will reflect all these factors. The smaller the error rate, the better the estimate. Interviewer error in asking the questions is not necessarily reflected in this error rate.
Large error rates (i.e. high variability) in the national
forest visit (NFV), site visit (SV) and Wilderness visit estimates is primarily
caused by a small sample size in a given stratum (for example General Forest
Area low use days) where the use observed was beyond that stratum’s normal
range. For example, on the
The descriptive information about national forest visitors
is based upon only those visitors that were interviewed. If a forest has distinct seasonal use
patterns and activities that vary greatly by season, these patterns may or may
not be adequately captured in this study.
This study was designed to estimate total number of people during a
year. Sample days were distributed based
upon high, medium, and low exiting use days, not seasons. When applying these results in forest
analysis, items such as activity participation should be carefully scrutinized. For example, although the
Some forest visitors were counted and included in the total forest use estimate but were not surveyed. This included visitors to recreation special events and organization camps.
The results of the recreation site/area stratification and sample days accomplished by this forest are displayed in Table 1. This table describes the population of available site days open for sampling based on forest pre-work completed prior to the actual surveys. Every site and area on the forest was categorized as high, medium, low, or closed last exiting recreation use. This stratification was then used to randomly select sampling days for this forest. The project methods paper listed on page one describes the sampling process and sample allocation formulas in detail. Basically, at least eight sample days per stratum are randomly selected for sampling and more days are added if the stratum is very large. Also displayed on the table is the percentage of sample days per stratum accomplished by the forest.
TYPE |
SAMPLING STRATUM |
# DAYS SAMPLED |
# DAYS IN POPULATION |
SAMPLING RATE |
|
DUDS |
NONPROXY |
HIGH |
11 |
48 |
22.92 |
DUDS |
NONPROXY |
MEDIUM |
12 |
377 |
3.18 |
DUDS |
NONPROXY |
LOW |
11 |
540 |
2.04 |
GFA |
NONPROXY |
HIGH |
14 |
430 |
3.26 |
GFA |
NONPROXY |
MEDIUM |
18 |
1,794 |
1.00 |
GFA |
NONPROXY |
LOW |
14 |
9,431 |
0.15 |
OUDS |
NONPROXY |
HIGH |
11 |
109 |
10.09 |
OUDS |
NONPROXY |
MEDIUM |
12 |
502 |
2.39 |
OUDS |
NONPROXY |
LOW |
11 |
1,915 |
0.57 |
OUDS |
PROXY |
DUR5 |
4 |
60 |
6.67 |
OUDS |
PROXY |
FE4 |
4 |
175 |
2.29 |
OUDS |
PROXY |
RE4 |
4 |
136 |
2.94 |
OUDS |
PROXY |
SUP4 |
5 |
89 |
5.62 |
WILDERNESS |
NONPROXY |
HIGH |
11 |
132 |
8.33 |
WILDERNESS |
NONPROXY |
MEDIUM |
13 |
824 |
1.58 |
WILDERNESS |
NONPROXY |
LOW |
11 |
2,050 |
0.54 |
WILDERNESS |
PROXY |
MA2 |
4 |
233 |
1.72 |
Visitor use estimates are available at the national, regional, and forest level. Only forest level data is provided here. For national and regional reports visit the following web site: (http://www.fs.fed.us/recreation/programs/nvum).
VISIT TYPE |
VISITS |
80 % CONFIDENCE
INTERVAL |
SITE
VISITS |
543,881 |
17.4 |
|
466,835 |
18.9 |
WILDERNESS
VISITS |
34,178 |
31.1 |
The
Recreation use on
the forest for fiscal year 2003 was 466,835 national forest visits. The 80 percent confidence interval width was
+/- 18.9 percent. There were 543,881
site visits, an average of 1.16 site visits per
national forest visit. Included in the
site visit estimate are 34,178 Wilderness visits.
A total of 1,005 visitors were contacted on the forest during the sample year. Of these, seven percent refused to be interviewed. Of the 935 people who agreed to be interviewed, 20.5 percent were not recreating, including 1 percent who just stopped to use the bathroom, 9.1 percent were working, 6.2 percent were just passing through, and 4.3 percent had some other reason to be there. About 79.5 percent of those interviewed said their primary purpose on the forest was recreation and 89.4 percent of them were exiting for the last time. Of the visitors leaving the forest agreeing to be interviewed, about 86 percent were last exiting recreation visitors (the target interview population). Table 3 displays the number of last-exiting recreation visitors interviewed at each site type and the type of interview form they answered.
FORM TYPE |
DEVELOPED DAY USE |
DEVELOPED
OVERNIGHT |
GENERAL |
WILDERNESS |
BASIC |
46 |
55 |
109 |
25 |
ECON |
42 |
48 |
106 |
17 |
SATIS |
40 |
51 |
107 |
18 |
1/ Form type means the
type of interview form administered to the visitor. The basic form did not ask either economic or
satisfaction questions. The Satisfaction
form did not ask economic questions and the economic form did not ask
satisfaction questions.
Descriptions of forest visitors were developed based upon the characteristics of interviewed visitors and expanding to the national forest visitor population. Tables 4 and 5 display the gender and age distributions for national forest visits.
MALE |
FEMALE |
79.7 |
20.3 |
AGECLASS |
PERCENT |
UNDER
16 |
10.22 |
16
TO 19 |
0.75 |
20
TO 29 |
14.33 |
30
TO 39 |
10.42 |
40
TO 49 |
29.19 |
50
TO 59 |
19.77 |
60 TO 69 |
9.38 |
70
PLUS |
5.95 |
Visitors categorized themselves into one of seven race/ethnicity categories. Table 6 gives a detailed breakout by category.
WHITE |
HISPANIC OR LATINO |
NATIVE AMERICAN |
AFRICAN AMERICAN |
ASIAN |
PACIFIC ISLANDER |
OTHER |
98.2 |
0.8 |
0.8 |
0.0 |
0.2 |
0.0 |
0.5 |
Less than one percent (0.3%) of forest visitors were from another country. The survey did not collect country affiliation. The most common visitor zip codes are shown in Table 7. Additional zip code information was collected and is available upon request. This information can help determine the primary market area for the forest.
COUNT |
PERCENT |
|
83467 |
46 |
8.09859 |
83226 |
23 |
4.04930 |
83221 |
21 |
3.69718 |
83201 |
19 |
3.34507 |
83301 |
16 |
2.81690 |
83338 |
14 |
2.46479 |
83709 |
12 |
2.11268 |
83340 |
11 |
1.93662 |
83401 |
11 |
1.93662 |
83204 |
10 |
1.76056 |
83402 |
10 |
1.76056 |
83213 |
9 |
1.58451 |
83404 |
9 |
1.58451 |
83251 |
7 |
1.23239 |
83333 |
7 |
1.23239 |
83642 |
7 |
1.23239 |
83702 |
7 |
1.23239 |
83202 |
6 |
1.05634 |
83318 |
6 |
1.05634 |
83406 |
6 |
1.05634 |
83442 |
6 |
1.05634 |
There was an average of 2.6 people per vehicle with an average of 2.11 axles per vehicle. This information in conjunction with traffic counts was used to expand observations from individual interviews to the full forest population of recreation visitors. This information may be useful to forest engineers and others who use vehicle counters to conduct traffic studies.
Several questions on the NVUM survey form
dealt directly with use of designated Wilderness. Wilderness was sampled 39 days on the forest,
and 60 interviews were obtained. There
were 52.6 percent male and 47.4 percent female visitors to Wilderness on the
forest. Tables 8 and 9 display the age
distribution and race/ethnicity of Wilderness visitors.
AGECLASS |
PERCENT |
UNDER 16 |
9.33 |
16 TO 19 |
0.00 |
20 TO 29 |
0.90 |
30 TO 39 |
7.68 |
40 TO 49 |
19.87 |
50 TO 59 |
29.08 |
60 TO 69 |
24.96 |
70 PLUS |
8.19 |
WHITE |
HISPANIC
OR LATINO |
NATIVE
AMERICAN |
AFRICAN
AMERICAN |
ASIAN |
PACIFIC
ISLANDER |
OTHER |
95.9 |
0.0 |
4.1 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
The Wilderness visitors were from a wide variety of zip codes. The most common Wilderness visitor zip codes are shown in Table 10. Additional zip code information is available upon request.
WLDZIP |
COUNT |
PERCENT |
83202 |
3 |
5.08475 |
83340 |
3 |
5.08475 |
83467 |
3 |
5.08475 |
80526 |
2 |
3.38983 |
83605 |
2 |
3.38983 |
83642 |
2 |
3.38983 |
83702 |
2 |
3.38983 |
83703 |
2 |
3.38983 |
83705 |
2 |
3.38983 |
83706 |
2 |
3.38983 |
83709 |
2 |
3.38983 |
02459 |
1 |
1.69492 |
07405 |
1 |
1.69492 |
32168 |
1 |
1.69492 |
38462 |
1 |
1.69492 |
44140 |
1 |
1.69492 |
56074 |
1 |
1.69492 |
77478 |
1 |
1.69492 |
77586 |
1 |
1.69492 |
80112 |
1 |
1.69492 |
82070 |
1 |
1.69492 |
The average length of stay in Wilderness on the forest was 31.7 hours. In addition, all visitors were asked on how many different days they entered into designated Wilderness during their national forest visit even if we interviewed them at a developed recreation site or general forest area. Of those visitors who did enter designated Wilderness, they entered 2.75 different days.
Slightly more than thirteen percent of Wilderness visitors said they used the services of a commercial guide.
Table 11 gives detailed information about how the Wilderness visitors rated various aspects of the area. A general example of how to interpret this information: If the visitors had rated the importance of the adequacy of signage a 5.0 (very important) and they rated their satisfaction with the adequacy of signage a 3.0 (somewhat satisfied) then the forest might be able to increase visitor satisfaction. Perhaps twenty-nine percent of visitors said the adequacy of signage was poor. The forest could target improving this sector of visitors for increased satisfaction by improving the signage for Wilderness.
Wilderness visitors on the average rated their visit 4.0 (on a scale from 1 to 10) concerning crowding, meaning they felt there were few people there. Zero percent said the area they visited was overcrowded (a 10 on the scale) and 35.8 percent said there was hardly anyone there (a 1 on the scale).
ITEM |
Poor |
Fair |
Average |
Good |
Very
Good |
Average
Rating * |
Mean
Importance ** |
N obs |
Restroom cleanliness |
0.0 |
1.6 |
15.5 |
32.9 |
50.0 |
4.3 |
4.1 |
10 |
Developed facility condition |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
4.2 |
9 |
Condition of environment |
0.8 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
29.3 |
69.9 |
4.7 |
4.9 |
17 |
Employee helpfulness |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
6 |
Interpretive display |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
3.7 |
9 |
Parking availability |
17.4 |
17.4 |
0.0 |
20.1 |
45.2 |
3.6 |
3.7 |
12 |
Parking lot condition |
0.0 |
17.4 |
0.0 |
37.4 |
45.2 |
4.1 |
4.0 |
12 |
Rec. info. available |
0.0 |
0.0 |
9.2 |
51.8 |
39.0 |
4.3 |
3.6 |
13 |
Road condition |
14.8 |
0.0 |
44.5 |
15.9 |
24.8 |
3.4 |
4.3 |
13 |
Feeling of safety |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
43.9 |
56.1 |
4.6 |
4.3 |
17 |
Scenery |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
7.3 |
92.7 |
4.9 |
4.7 |
17 |
Signage adequacy |
12.2 |
11.4 |
15.5 |
19.1 |
41.7 |
3.7 |
3.7 |
16 |
Trail condition |
13.2 |
19.3 |
0.0 |
47.1 |
20.5 |
3.4 |
4.4 |
12 |
Value for fee paid |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
4 |
*Scale is: Poor = 1 Fair = 2
Average = 3 Good = 4 Very good = 5
** Scale is: 1= not important
2= somewhat important 3=moderately
important 4= important 5 = very important
N obs means the number of visitors who responded to this item.
Note: For items with less than 10 responses
the data was not reported
A description of visitor activity during their national forest visit was developed. This basic information includes participation in various recreation activities, length of stay on the national forest and at recreation sites, visitor satisfaction with national forest facilities and services, and economic expenditures.
The average length of stay on this forest for a national forest visit was 43.2 hours. Over 23 percent (23.59%) of visitors stayed overnight on the forest.
In addition, visitors reported how much time they spent on the specific recreation site at which they were interviewed. Average time spent varied considerably by site and is displayed in Table 12.
Site Visit Average |
Developed Day Use |
Developed
Overnight Use |
|
Wilderness |
National Forest
Visit |
24.0 |
3.3 |
26.5 |
24.8 |
31.7 |
43.2 |
The average recreation visitor went to 1.16 sites during
their national forest visit.
During their visit to the forest, the top five recreation activities of the visitors were viewing natural features, viewing wildlife, hiking/walking, relaxing, driving for pleasure (see Table 13). Each visitor also picked one of these activities as their primary activity for their current recreation visit to the forest. The top primary activities were hiking/walking, hunting, fishing, relaxing, and driving for pleasure (see Table 13). Please note that the results of the NVUM activity analysis DO NOT identify the types of activities visitors would like to have offered on the national forests. It also does not tell us about displaced forest visitors, those who no longer visit the forest because the activities they desire are not offered.
Activity |
% Participating |
% as Main Activity |
Developed
Camping |
19.15 |
3.77 |
Primitive
Camping |
12.15 |
2.39 |
Backpacking |
22.32 |
0.71 |
Resort
Use |
5.14 |
0.16 |
Picnicking |
16.66 |
0.76 |
Viewing
Natural Features |
66.96 |
2.39 |
Visiting
Historic Sites |
21.23 |
2.66 |
|
11.29 |
0.23 |
Nature
Study |
8.70 |
0.00 |
Relaxing |
51.46 |
10.54 |
Fishing |
25.03 |
17.13 |
Hunting |
20.69 |
18.28 |
OHV
Use |
12.23 |
3.68 |
Driving
for Pleasure |
28.37 |
8.13 |
Snowmobiling |
0.03 |
0.03 |
Motorized
Water Activities |
0.68 |
0.00 |
Other
Motorized Activity |
0.65 |
0.13 |
Hiking
/ Walking |
55.55 |
19.36 |
Horesback
Riding |
3.07 |
1.01 |
Bicycling |
1.68 |
0.04 |
Non-motorized
Water |
8.76 |
1.81 |
Downhill
Skiing |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Cross-country
Skiing |
0.07 |
0.02 |
Other
Non-motorized |
17.16 |
3.19 |
|
7.72 |
0.66 |
Viewing
Wildlife |
60.34 |
5.14 |
Note: this column may
total more than 100% because some visitors chose more than one primary
activity.
One-third of the last exiting recreation visitors interviewed were asked about the types of constructed facilities and special designated areas they used during their visit. The five most used facilities/areas were: forest roads, forest trails, scenic byways, developed swimming site, and developed campground. Table 14 provides a summary of reported facility and special area use.
FACILITY |
PERCENT |
Developed
Campground |
13.86 |
Developed
Swimming Site |
21.94 |
Forest
Trails |
46.95 |
Scenic
Byway |
34.26 |
Wilderness |
4.40 |
Museum |
2.22 |
Picnic
Area |
5.76 |
Boat
Launch |
7.21 |
Designated
OHV Area |
1.94 |
|
44.79 |
Interpretive
Displays |
9.87 |
Information
Sites |
9.04 |
Organization
Camps |
0.12 |
Developed
Fishing Site |
5.31 |
Snowmobile
Area/Trails |
0.08 |
Downhill
Ski Area |
0.00 |
Nordic
Trails |
0.00 |
FS
Lodge |
0.88 |
FS
Fire Lookout |
0.02 |
Snowplay
Area |
0.00 |
Motorized Trails |
11.66 |
Recreation
Residence |
8.17 |
About one-third of visitors interviewed were asked a series of questions that enabled economic analyses. Several questions focused on the trip away from home that included their visit to the national forest, and others about their annual visits to the forest and annual spending on all outdoor recreation.
While away from home, some people just go to
the forest, while others incorporate a national forest visit as part of a
larger trip away from home. On this forest, 83.39 percent said that recreating
on this forest was their primary trip destination. Visitors were asked to select one of several
substitute choices, if for some reason they were unable to visit this national
forest. Their responses are shown in
Table 15. Slightly more than 73 percent
of visitors indicated their trip would include at least on night away from
home. The average number of nights away
for those staying away overnight was 5.1.
About 67 percent indicated they would be staying overnight within 50
miles of this forest, and for them, the average number of nights in the local
area was 3.2. Visitors estimated the
amount of money spent during their trip within 50 miles of the recreation site
at which they were interviewed (the trip may include multiple national forest
visits, as well as visits to other forests or parks). This information will be available in a
separate report and data file that can be used to estimate the local jobs and
income that are generated by recreation visits to this forest.
Substitute response |
Percent
who would have: |
Come back another time |
29.8 |
Stayed at Home |
9.2 |
Gone elsewhere for the Same activity |
44.2 |
Gone elsewhere for a Different activity |
14.4 |
Gone to Work |
1.3 |
Had some other substitute |
1.7 |
In the 12 months prior to the interview the typical visitor had come to this forest 14.2 times for all activities, including 9.6 times to participate in their identified main activity. Visitors were also asked about the amount of money they spent in a typical year on all outdoor recreation activities including equipment, recreation trips, memberships, and licenses. Nearly 15% said they spent less then $500 per year, and a little less than 6% said they spent over $10,000 per year (Table 16).
$$
spent each year on outdoor recreation |
Percent
of Total |
UNDER 500 |
14.67 |
500 - 999 |
20.11 |
1000 - 1999 |
16.30 |
2000 - 2999 |
16.85 |
3000 - 3999 |
7.61 |
4000 - 4999 |
5.43 |
5000 - 9999 |
13.04 |
OVER 10000 |
5.98 |
About one-third of visitors interviewed on the forest rated their satisfaction with the recreation facilities and services provided. Although their satisfaction ratings pertain to conditions at the specific site or area they visited, this information is not valid at the site-specific level. The survey design does not usually have enough responses for every individual site or area on the forest to draw these conclusions. Rather, the information is generalized to overall satisfaction with facilities and services on the forest as a whole.
Visitors’ site-specific answers may be colored by a particular condition on a particular day at a particular site. For example, a visitor camping in a developed campground when all the forest personnel are off firefighting and the site has not been cleaned. Perhaps the garbage had not been emptied or the toilets cleaned during their stay, although the site usually receives excellent maintenance. The visitor may have been very unsatisfied with the cleanliness of restrooms.
In addition to how satisfied visitors were with facilities and services they were asked how important that particular facility or service was to the quality of their recreation experience. The importance of these elements to the visitors’ recreation experience is then analyzed in relation to their satisfaction. Those elements that were extremely important to a visitor’s overall recreation experience and the visitor rated as poor quality are those elements needing most attention by the forest. Those elements that were rated not important to the visitors’ recreation experience need the least attention.
Tables 17 through 19 summarize visitor satisfaction with
the forest facilities and services at Day Use Developed sites, Overnight
Developed sites and
ITEM |
Poor |
Fair |
Average |
Good |
Very Good |
Average Rating * |
Mean Importance ** |
N obs |
Restroom
cleanliness |
0.0 |
0.0 |
16.7 |
36.9 |
46.4 |
4.3 |
3.9 |
24 |
Developed
facility condition |
5.7 |
7.1 |
0.0 |
41.5 |
45.7 |
4.1 |
3.7 |
28 |
Condition
of environment |
0.0 |
7.8 |
9.8 |
31.4 |
51.0 |
4.3 |
4.8 |
39 |
Employee
helpfulness |
0.0 |
0.0 |
8.6 |
12.3 |
79.1 |
4.7 |
3.7 |
25 |
Interpretive
display |
0.0 |
0.0 |
5.5 |
35.0 |
59.5 |
4.5 |
3.6 |
30 |
Parking
availability |
4.4 |
0.0 |
1.1 |
53.3 |
41.2 |
4.3 |
3.0 |
33 |
Parking
lot condition |
0.0 |
0.0 |
1.2 |
56.4 |
42.4 |
4.4 |
3.1 |
31 |
Rec.
info. available |
0.0 |
0.0 |
6.6 |
22.8 |
70.5 |
4.6 |
3.8 |
30 |
Road
condition |
0.0 |
8.8 |
20.5 |
45.0 |
25.6 |
3.9 |
4.1 |
39 |
Feeling
of safety |
0.0 |
0.0 |
7.2 |
45.8 |
47.0 |
4.4 |
4.2 |
38 |
Scenery |
0.0 |
0.0 |
4.9 |
30.4 |
64.8 |
4.6 |
4.5 |
39 |
Signage
adequacy |
0.0 |
0.0 |
11.8 |
51.6 |
36.6 |
4.2 |
4.0 |
36 |
Trail condition |
0.0 |
0.0 |
30.8 |
51.7 |
17.6 |
3.9 |
3.0 |
14 |
Value
for fee paid |
0.0 |
3.2 |
0.0 |
28.3 |
68.5 |
4.6 |
3.8 |
17 |
*Scale
is: Poor = 1 Fair = 2
Average = 3 Good = 4 Very good = 5
**
Scale is: 1= not important 2= somewhat
important 3=moderately important 4= important 5 = very important
N obs means the
number of visitors who responded to this item.
Note: For items with less than 10 responses the data
was not reported
ITEM |
Poor |
Fair |
Average |
Good |
Very Good |
Average Rating * |
Mean Importance ** |
N obs |
Restroom
cleanliness |
3.1 |
6.3 |
25.1 |
11.5 |
53.9 |
4.1 |
3.9 |
44 |
Developed
facility condition |
0.7 |
2.8 |
13.7 |
48.2 |
34.7 |
4.1 |
4.1 |
49 |
Condition
of environment |
0.7 |
1.8 |
8.5 |
34.9 |
54.2 |
4.4 |
4.8 |
51 |
Employee
helpfulness |
0.0 |
0.0 |
25.4 |
12.8 |
61.7 |
4.4 |
3.6 |
19 |
Interpretive
display |
19.7 |
3.6 |
22.7 |
15.4 |
38.6 |
3.5 |
3.4 |
29 |
Parking
availability |
2.0 |
10.0 |
34.0 |
17.2 |
36.8 |
3.8 |
3.4 |
50 |
Parking
lot condition |
2.1 |
0.7 |
16.0 |
33.6 |
47.6 |
4.2 |
3.6 |
47 |
Rec.
info. available |
0.0 |
0.8 |
30.9 |
45.8 |
22.4 |
3.9 |
3.4 |
37 |
Road
condition |
0.7 |
11.6 |
21.7 |
54.9 |
11.0 |
3.6 |
3.7 |
51 |
Feeling
of safety |
0.0 |
1.8 |
9.2 |
54.0 |
34.9 |
4.2 |
4.3 |
50 |
Scenery |
0.0 |
1.8 |
0.7 |
22.5 |
75.1 |
4.7 |
4.7 |
51 |
Signage
adequacy |
2.0 |
3.4 |
30.8 |
34.5 |
29.3 |
3.9 |
3.7 |
49 |
Trail condition |
0.0 |
11.3 |
1.5 |
71.3 |
15.9 |
3.9 |
3.5 |
24 |
Value
for fee paid |
0.0 |
6.3 |
14.4 |
16.4 |
62.9 |
4.4 |
3.9 |
34 |
*Scale
is: Poor = 1 Fair = 2
Average = 3 Good = 4 Very good = 5
**
Scale is: 1= not important 2= somewhat
important 3=moderately important 4= important 5 = very important
N obs means the number of visitors who responded to this item.
Note: For items with less than 10 responses the data was not reported
ITEM |
Poor |
Fair |
Average |
Good |
Very Good |
Average Rating * |
Mean Importance ** |
N obs |
Restroom
cleanliness |
2.5 |
3.3 |
5.0 |
63.2 |
25.9 |
4.1 |
3.7 |
35 |
Developed
facility condition |
0.0 |
1.6 |
5.6 |
66.6 |
26.2 |
4.2 |
3.6 |
38 |
Condition
of environment |
0.8 |
1.3 |
2.8 |
50.8 |
44.3 |
4.4 |
4.4 |
79 |
Employee
helpfulness |
0.0 |
27.0 |
1.1 |
14.4 |
57.5 |
4.0 |
4.0 |
41 |
Interpretive
display |
1.1 |
2.2 |
3.3 |
76.1 |
17.4 |
4.1 |
3.5 |
46 |
Parking
availability |
2.5 |
4.4 |
21.8 |
42.0 |
29.3 |
3.9 |
2.9 |
66 |
Parking
lot condition |
0.7 |
2.6 |
38.7 |
31.4 |
26.6 |
3.8 |
2.6 |
45 |
Rec.
info. available |
1.8 |
18.8 |
22.1 |
45.9 |
11.4 |
3.5 |
3.7 |
48 |
Road
condition |
3.2 |
7.8 |
23.6 |
41.2 |
24.2 |
3.8 |
3.3 |
76 |
Feeling
of safety |
0.0 |
1.0 |
2.0 |
28.3 |
68.6 |
4.6 |
4.0 |
77 |
Scenery |
0.0 |
0.5 |
1.3 |
9.6 |
88.6 |
4.9 |
4.6 |
79 |
Signage
adequacy |
15.9 |
3.0 |
6.7 |
55.1 |
19.3 |
3.6 |
4.1 |
74 |
Trail condition |
0.7 |
3.3 |
18.0 |
40.4 |
37.5 |
4.1 |
3.8 |
28 |
Value
for fee paid |
0.0 |
0.0 |
6.2 |
37.5 |
56.2 |
4.5 |
3.0 |
14 |
*Scale
is: Poor = 1 Fair = 2
Average = 3 Good = 4 Very good = 5
**
Scale is: 1= not important 2= somewhat
important 3=moderately important 4= important 5 = very important
N obs means the number of visitors who responded to this item.
Note: For items with less than 10 responses
the data was not reported.
Visitors rated their perception of how crowded the recreation site or area felt to them. This information is useful when looking at the type of site the visitor was using since someone visiting a designated Wilderness may think 5 people is too many while someone visiting a developed campground may think 200 people is about right. Table 20 summarizes mean perception of crowding by site type on a scale of 1 to 10 where 1 means hardly anyone was there, and a 10 means the area was perceived as overcrowded.
Developed
Day Use |
Overnight
Use |
|
Wilderness |
|
10 Overcrowded |
0.0 |
20.1 |
4.0 |
0.0 |
9 |
0.0 |
8.5 |
2.8 |
0.0 |
8 |
4.9 |
9.2 |
14.8 |
0.8 |
7 |
7.8 |
6.7 |
13.6 |
7.3 |
6 |
3.9 |
1.3 |
1.5 |
0.8 |
5 |
7.9 |
13.4 |
28.9 |
18.7 |
4 |
3.9 |
9.6 |
2.5 |
7.3 |
3 |
18.7 |
8.2 |
7.9 |
10.6 |
2 |
16.8 |
0.7 |
6.6 |
18.7 |
1 Hardly anyone there |
36.1 |
22.2 |
17.4 |
35.8 |
Visitors were asked if there were any accommodations or assistance that the forest could offer that would be helpful to the visitor and anyone in their group to improve their recreation experience. Responses are summarized in Table 21.
Site Name |
What Accommodation could be made |
110)Custer
Motrway@Sunbeam-D3 |
don't
close any more roads- keep forest open- take out bug killed trees and thin to
keep o |
110)Custer
Motrway@Sunbeam-D3 |
allow
open forests as opposed to closed forests |
110)Custer
Motrway@Sunbeam-D3 |
needed
more signs on the 4-wheeler trail |
110)Custer
Motrway@Sunbeam-D3 |
make
people keep their clothes on at |
118)
Lower |
parking
control |
124)
FR 198 @ Hwy 21 - D3 |
be
able to remove fish; gate the road |
157)
Goat Mtn - D8 |
shot
signs or destroyed signs; 4-wheeler |
298)
Goldbug |
keep
it a secret |
298)
Goldbug |
trash
cans |
368)
Pass Creek Rd - D4 |
need
someone to monitor fire circle; camp stop should not be Paton Creek |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
the
wilder the better- too many campsites |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
keep
it wild- undeveloped |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
camping
areas are great; 16 day Cove Creek area not enforcing it |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
more
restrooms |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
parking
with campers |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
parking |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
off
road parking along hay |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
would
like map of boat access ramps |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
no
camping on roads |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
longer
stays for camping (more than 16 days) |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
improve
road beyond extend pavement |
36a)
Fish&Game Chk Station - D7 |
road
maintenance- need signs with names; too many motorized restrictions; 55 or
older- ret |
429)
Antelope - D4 |
good
roads |
429)
Antelope - D4 |
more
deer; more explicitly marked signs |
429)
Antelope - D4 |
no
accessibility to private land, creating 4-wheeler trails- out law 4-wheelers |
429)
Antelope - D4 |
better
roads; less people |
429)
Antelope - D4 |
better
signs on Fish Creek |
429)
Antelope - D4 |
more/better
signs |
429)
Antelope - D4 |
less
ATVs |
429)
Antelope - D4 |
point
me out a deer |
432)
Fish Creek |
better
access for hunting |
437)
Trail Creek |
water
shouldn't be diverted in Big Lost |
437)
Trail Creek |
better
maps |
438)
Park Creek - D4 |
fix
the washboards but don't pave the road |
438)
Park Creek - D4 |
do
not pave |
90)
Custer Motorway - D2 |
less
4-wheelers |
Big
Bayhorse CG |
add
more camping spaces a camping area |
Big
Bayhorse CG |
provide
detailed geological survey maps (gemstone hunters) |
Big
Bayhorse CG |
make
roads better |
Boundary
Creek CG |
reallocate
fire finding to cover the park and pay for and abolish fire program |
Boundary
Creek CG |
micro
brewery |
Boundary
Creek CG |
trash
bins |
Corn
Creek BR/CG |
keep
everyone else out |
Custer
Townsite |
cut
down dead trees |
Custer
Townsite |
trim
branches over hanging road, work on roads |
|
clean
bathroom |
Dagger
Falls CG |
4
wheelers and dirt bikes running loop |
Dagger
Falls CG |
clean
bathroom |
Loristica
Group CG |
first
turn is too sharp to turn around |
Loristica
Group CG |
flat
camping; campers can't get in around switchbacks develop more |
Loristica
Group CG |
better
fire pits |
|
clean
bathroom |
|
like
to see a lottery system point bases (like hunting) to get permit, with
special points |
W-109)
Pistol Creek Trail |
fix
trail- completely washed away in places |
W-16) |
cattle
guards need to be set up for smaller footed people or accommodate for people |
W-16) |
shouldn't
have to pay $5 per day |
W-34b)Flying
B Ranch @ Pack Bridge |
improve/repair
trails |
W-40a)
West Fork Camas |
plant
the stream with fish and allow keeping |
W-95) Marsh Creek TH |
better
signs- make sense (fishing signs); don't let kids drive 4-wheelers; better
restroom |
W-95) Marsh Creek TH |
stop
building logging roads, more silting |
Wildhorse
CG |
4
wheelers and dirt bikes running loop |
|
running
water; ban alcohol on |
Yankee
Fork Gold Dredge Site |
oil
dirt roads |
Yankee Fork Gold Dredge Site |
don't give speeding tickets; motorized vehicles out |
Yankee
Fork Gold Dredge Site |
more
air ports with showers |