The powerful energy of a waterfall teeming with spring runoff, Half Dome dusted in snow and the lines of cars filled with tourists to see it. On any other April inside Yosemite National Park, that would be the case. Not this April.
Thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, the park is closed, campgrounds are empty, and the trails are void of people.
The local residents aren’t complaining. The deer, bobcats, coyotes and bears no longer have to deal with the hordes of camera-toting tourists vying to capture nature. They now roam unfettered.
Los Angeles Times photographer Carolyn Cole gives us an inside look at the park and its return to the wild.
Open meadows
Merced River
Residents
Thanks to the coronavirus, Yosemite National Park is closed, the campgrounds are empty and the trails are void of people.
Tunnel view
Wildlife in abundance
Half Dome
Curry Village
Sunrise in Yosemite Valley
Yosemite Falls
Early warning
These are some of the unusual new scenes across the Southland during the coronavirus outbreak.
Getty Images’ John Moore documented emergency medical workers on the ground in New York in the first week of April as the coronavirus ravaged the state.
Eerie photos and stunning aerial shots show what California looks like under Gov. Newsom’s “stay at home” order.
Los Angeles Times’ visual coverage of the coronavirus crisis
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