Planning A National Park Visit

Published: 19th January 2011
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Yosemite National Park is loved by a lot of people. Granted to describe the sight of Yosemite Valley upon exiting the last of the Highway 41 tunnels as breathtaking is unoriginal but it definitely is an accurate way of putting it. The combination of the waterfalls along with the Half Dome protuberance and the walled valley solid gray rocks make for an awesome shot regardless of your photography skill level.

Around 95 percent of people visiting Yosemite miss seeing 95 percent of the park because the crowds are too big to handle. Yosemite has its almost perpendicular feature that intrigue its visitors and make it worthwhile for them to bear with the large tourist populations. What is above them has travelers oblivious to the jam packed situation below. More people tour the place in summer so it is better to go during the spring or winter or autumn months.

Not everyone is a fan of the Great Smoky Mountains national park. One true way to savor the visit is to walk the trails of the most toured park. At 9.2 million the Grand Canyon cannot compete with the park when it comes to visitor numbers pulled in per year. Some Westerners have gone to the place thrice but have found the crowded roadways pretty much uninteresting. Cherokee and Gatlinburg are entry towns where tourists can get sucked in by various tourist traps including casinos. The decline in air quality was noted in the past several years. National Parks are known for this feature but with so many soaking it in it failed to last.

The Wrangell Saint Elias is one more national park of interest. Gates of the Arctic along with Kobuk Valley rarely receive visitors but the two form part of the 55 million acre parkland located in Alaska. But I've never gone southeast of Anchorage to the place the park service calls The Mountain Kingdom of North America. This is where the most mountains and glaciers measuring 16000 feet can be found.

The national park I'd most like to revisit is the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. When I was a kid, my father hated the crowds of the South Rim so we always made the long drive to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. I've been back to the Grand Canyon many times, but when I am elbow to elbow with crowds, I wish for the relative solitude and almost equally spectacular views across the canyon.

Grizzly bears in Kabuk Valley as well as buffalo in Yellowstone can be observed while touring the Everglades wildlife park. Anhinga Trail in Everglades specifically the mudflats is where tourists will usually catch gators preoccupied with basking in the sun. From its pointed teeth as it yawns to its silent and slow dip into the water with nothing left above the surface but its small eyes it is little wonder many get the chills when they see it.

Monument Valley is often mistaken by people for a national park. You frequently think of the West when you see such red colored stones and rocks. Arizona and Utah has an area forming a section of the Navajo Indian territory that a number of films has used as background. But strings cannot be pulled to reclassify it as a national park because it is presently listed with a sovereign status. Nevertheless it is still a favorite location for many.

A lot of people do not see the point in giving Hot Springs the national park label. The Natural State Arkansas has a spa town where people can get old fashioned massage routines over at Bathhouse Row. It might be a no to classifying it a national park however it can pass for a national historical place. Although it belonged to the federal lands since the 1830s the area was grandfathered in the same year 1916 the National Park Service showed up. Once in the club, it's next to impossible to get out.

Something delightful twice over lies within the Glacier Waterton International Peace Park.

Combine them and you are looking at an international peace parkland. The Tudor Prince of Wales Hotel imitation back in Canada with the old British inspired tea hour is another must see location.

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