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This week I
read something in the news about the possibility of the National Parks having
to close unless the government reaches a deal on the budget. I remember we went
through this last year as well, and it was no fun thinking about the gorgeous
parks having to close due to the fact that selfish people are in charge of
making decisions.
Anyway,
because of this fact, and because I had already thought about writing a post on
National Parks, here is my little shout out to “Americas Best Idea.”
The first
time I went to a National Park was back on 2009, after Joe and I spent the summer
in San Francisco. After the end of Joe’s summer program, we had a full month
before the start of the school semester. As a result, we decided to take that
time to slowly drive back to Minnesota, and to camp in parks along the way.
We left San
Francisco and started the drive west. As soon as we left the Bay Area, we
started to really notice the August temperatures soaring up as we ventured
farther into the valley and into the desert. Our first stop was at a regional
park on Lake Isabella, by the Kern River. Paradise Cove Campground served as an
overnight stop on our way to Death Valley.
Sometime
before we started this trip, I had read on an issue of National Geographic,
that the best locations to stargaze in the United States were Arches National
Park in Utah, and Death Valley National Park in California. As we drove to the
park, I couldn’t wait to see the stars at night. Little did I know that I would
have to wait almost 3 years for that wish to come true!
We barely
got to Death Valley as our car started to act out on the way up to cross the
mountains. Well, it started to massively overheat and we had to stop every
quarter of a mile or so to let it cool down. Yes, it was that hot. In fact, it
was 122 degrees Celsius, so hot, we were not allowed to camp in the park!
Instead, we had to keep driving all the way to Las Vegas, where we ended up
spending the night!
After Las
Vegas, we drove to Grand Canyon National Park and we were lucky enough to get
the last campsite available on the first-come-first-serve campground! We spent
about a week here, split between the South and North rim. We especially loved
the more remote, harder to reach, quieter, North Rim. Here we saw the endemic
Kaibab squirrel, a treat for us, nature lovers!
It was also
at the Grand Canyon that we got totally hooked on hiking! In our desire to
explore the park and get away from the masses of people (especially on the
South Rim!), we started going on longer hikes, which tend to be emptier. Turns
out, people don’t want to walk 10 miles to gorgeous vista points, or secluded
picnic spots! All the better for us, I guess!
After
considerably increasing the mileage under our hiking boots, we got in the car
again and started making our way to Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado.
The whole feel
of this road trip was living the moment, enjoying out time and our freedom, so
we were not too concerned with being efficient about the routes we took to get
to places. And, because of this flexibility, we were able to make detours along
our routes.
Two fun
detours we took were Monument Valley in Utah, and Four Corners in Utah,
Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona! Both places were marked by reddish rocks,
lots of tourists, and pretty nice weather! Lovely places, both of them!
We arrived
to Mesa Verde in the evening and, after seeing our site and the beauty that
surrounded us, we decided to extend our stay at the park for an additional 2
days, to stay there for almost a week.
Mesa Verde
was such a pleasant surprise to me. I had no idea ruins existed in the United
States. Ancestral Puebloans made Mesa Verde their home from about A.D. 550 to
1300. For more than 700 years they and their descendants lived and flourished
here. It was very powerful and incredibly amazing to tour these sites and to
see these adobe constructions. Mesa Verde is one of my favorite National Parks
because it offered history, gorgeous scenery, and fabulous hiking! Also, during
our time in Mesa Verde, we spotted a variety of wildlife, some of which we had
never seen before, like the Collared Lizard.
From Mesa
Verde we continued making our way south, this time to go meet up with friends
in New Mexico. We didn’t camp in a National Park in New Mexico but on a
campground ran by the Bureau of Land Management. Our campsite was right next to
the Rio Grande and driving distance from the historical town of Taos.
Our original
plans were to head to Texas after our stay in New Mexico, however, we had been
so happy with the cooler temperatures we had been experiencing in high
altitudes, that we started questioning our plans. It was on a nice clear
evening in Santa Fe, that we decided to change our plans and, instead of
driving south east to Texas, we started driving north west to Yellowstone!
Oh,
Yellowstone! If you’ve been there, you know what I’m talking about! We spent a
week in Yellowstone and it was magical! Seeing the geysers, the mountains, the
lakes, the animals, it felt like traveling back in time, to a place where
animals roamed free, and nature had not been touched by humans.
Yellowstone
was the first of the National Parks and the one that led to the creation of
more parks. In fact, Yellowstone is credited with being the first national park
in the entire world!
After hiking
as much of Yellowstone as we could, being stuck in wildlife jams, and seeing
wolves, foxes, bison, and even bears, we started driving east, back to
Minnesota. On our way, we passed the Bad
Lands in South Dakota but we didn’t stop. We had been on the road for 31 days,
23 of which we had camped, and we were ready to get home, to our bed!
A year
later, Joe and I decided to spend Spring Break at a National Park. We looked all
around and found out that we needed to drive about 14 hours to the closest
national park that didn’t have snow in the ground! That park was Mammoth Cave
National Park in Kentucky.
Mammoth Cave
National Park, containing over 390 miles (630 km) of passageways, has the
longest cave system known in the world. The official name of the system is the
Mammoth-Flint Ridge Cave System for the ridge under which the cave has formed.
While visiting the park, we went into many of the caves that had been formed
because the water in the area (the Green River) goes underground through
sinkholes and then runs underground, forming caves. As the water has seeped
through the ground, it’s continued to create caves lower into the ground.
Walking around these caves was an amazing – and sometimes scary – experience!
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On December
2010 we decided to give Death Valley National Park a second try. This time, we
were allowed to camp, to hike and to stare at the stars at night. There was an
average of 60 degrees Celsius of difference between the first time we visited
the park and this visit. While in August I had been wearing almost nothing,
this time I was wearing every single piece of warm clothing I had brought with
me.
It was cold
but, the stars, oh the stars… they were gorgeous! To be fair, you can see the
Milky Way from most of the parks in the West, at least the ones I’ve visited.
A few months
ago, I wrote about our latest visit to a national park, this time in Maine,
where we visited Acadia. As I said before, Acadia National Park was beautiful
and offered fabulous coastal views, and amazing hiking in the coniferous forest
of its mountains!
Hope you
enjoyed this week’s photos. I love parks and I’m happy to pay them a little
tribute! For more fun photos, visit my Etsy store at: http://www.etsy.com/shop/WorldPhotosByPaola