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Tag Archives: RV Destinations

The Pros and Cons of Free Camping

26 Friday May 2017

Posted by Coach-Net in RV Information

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Camping, free camping, free RV camping, RV, RV Camping, RV Destinations, RV Life, RV Tips, RV travel

Camping fees aren’t getting any cheaper but thankfully the internet is loaded with free camping resources to lessen the blow of rising camping costs. If you’re like most RVers you love a good bargain, but as the popular saying goes, there’s no such thing as a free lunch. Before you rely on free RV camping websites to plan your frugal RVing journey, consider this short list of the pros and cons of free RV camping.free campin

The Cons of Free RV Camping

Free camping sounds like a great deal, but it has a few drawbacks. Let’s get those out of the way first.

Small campsites

Free camping spots in the United States are located on public lands. They’re often scenic and secluded, located off-the-beaten path where few people travel. Unfortunately, many of these prime camping spots just aren’t built for modern, larger RVs. A free and low cost camping guide published by the Escapees RV Club for its members describes one such campground as “Some sites OK for large rigs, but turnaround may be tight – scout first.” This is the general rule you should follow for almost all free RV campsites: first visit the destination without your rig. This ensures you can actually maneuver into and out of campground roads and parking spurs.

Rustic facilities

Free camping often means bare bones amenities, if you have any at all. In all but a few places, picnic tables, shelters and toilets are hard to come by. Water and RV dump stations are almost non-existent. You’ll probably also need to pack out your trash since many free campgrounds don’t have refuse removal services. Don’t expect your site to be perfectly level, either. Come prepared with all you need for comfort, like a ground cover and leveling blocks, or you may be disappointed.free camping

Harsh conditions

You usually won’t find free RV campsites in premium locations with mild weather. Most are situated in rough terrain that’s subject to extreme seasonal temperature changes. The free camping in Arizona is a perfect example. You’ll love the mild winters if you visit in January. But camping in July includes consistent triple digit temperatures which can make summer camping uncomfortable.

The Pros of Free RV Camping

Now that you know the disadvantages of free RV camping, let’s discuss the these benefits of campground penny-pinching.

Rugged isolation and solitude

If you crave an occasional escape from civilization, you’ll usually find it in these freebie spots. Many are located away from popular, crowded attractions like national parks, boating lakes and coastal regions. Cellular service can be unreliable or even non-existent, which keeps most technology-addicted campers away so you’ll often have the place to yourself. When you take the road less traveled, you’ll be rewarded with fewer people and more of a true wilderness experience.free camping

Less competition for campsites

Most RVers don’t want to work too hard for their campsites. They flock to the spots with easy access and conveniences like utility hookups. The majority of RVers also aren’t willing to sacrifice creature comforts when camping. Since most free RV campsites don’t offer these luxuries, your odds of finding a good spot increase exponentially, even on busy holiday weekends.

When you’re scouting reviews about free RV campsites, keep in mind that other RVers opinions are totally subjective. What one person thinks is paradise, another may interpret as hell on earth. There’s only way to find out the truth (and no, it’s not by doing a drone flyover). Get out and live the spirit of RV adventure. Just point your rig that way and find out for yourself.

 

About the Author:

Rene Agredano, a Coach-Net member since 2015, is a self-employed full-time RVer who enjoys writing, jewelry design and animal advocacy. Her adventures with a three-legged dog and husband Jim are chronicled at LiveWorkDream.com

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Journey through the Badlands: A Camper’s Guide

03 Friday Mar 2017

Posted by Coach-Net in Travel Destinations

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Badlands, Destination, Destination Ideas, National Park, National Parks, RV Camping, RV Destinations, RV travel, Travel Destination, US Traveling

badlands-south-dakotaSouth Dakota’s Badlands National Park is a treasure trove of green prairies, rich fossil beds, and a variety of wildlife. There are plenty of great activities to discover in the area surrounding the park, so set up camp at Sage Creek Campground, and get ready to explore. At Sage Creek Campground in South Dakota’s Badlands National Park you’ll awaken to herds of buffalo, view breathtaking sunsets over waves of grassy prairies, visit historic homesteads and embark on incredible hikes.

1880 Town

1880 Town is an attraction for all ages, featuring 30 buildings, all of which were built between the 1880s and the 1920s. The town has authentic furniture and relics from the past; a museum dedicated to Casey Tibbs, the nine-time World Champion Rodeo Cowboy (yeehaw!); and even props from the movie “Dances with Wolves”. We can’t guarantee that you’ll be dancing with any wolves, but we do know that you’re in for a good time. The site even offers costume rentals so you can fit right in with your surroundings.1880-town

Prairie Homestead

Built in 1909 by the Brown Family, the Prairie Homestead is one of the last remaining sod homes in the United States. Take a tour of the home, find some great souvenirs in the new gift shop, or get the whole family to dress up in period clothing (perfect for funny photo shoots). Make sure to check out their adorable prairie dogs, too. Bonus: Children under nine are able to go in free!

Minuteman Missile National Historic Site

Minuteman Missile National Historic Site was founded in 1999 in order to show Americans how close our country was to WWIII. The site is one of the only places that you’re able to view a real nuclear missile that was set up for use during the Cold War. A guided tour of the site includes silos as well as the control room. You’ll probably leave thinking that this place is… the bomb!minuteman-missile-national-historic-site

Castle Trailhead

Castle Trail is the longest trail in Badlands National Park, spanning approximately 10 miles. Used far less than many of the other trails in the park, peaceful Castle Trail provides many opportunities for you to view the wildlife of the park. The trail also winds right by the Fossil Exhibit Trail, where you can view and read about fossil replicas.

Two Bit Saloon & Steakhouse

During your trip, stop by Two Bit Saloon & Steakhouse for a local experience—and some of the best burgers in South Dakota. Make sure to visit on a Friday or Saturday, as those are the only days that they serve their full menu. On weekends, the place is packed with locals, and that’s always a good sign.two-bit-saloon-and-steakhouse

Wall Drug Store

Wall Drug Store is an attraction not to be missed in South Dakota. The store grew famous for going from being a small drug store offering free ice water in the 1930s to growing into a massive tourist attraction. The store offers an old-fashioned soda fountain, five-cent coffee, and a variety of kitschy gifts for everyone in its labyrinthine complex of shops and restaurants. And don’t miss the 80-foot-tall dinosaur!

Sage Creek Campground

At Sage Creek Campground, you’ll get to camp out surrounded by Badlands beauty and native wildlife. This campground operates on a first-come, first-serve basis, but camping here is completely FREE! Keep in mind that the campground does not offer water, hookups, or bathroom facilities, but who needs those things when you’ve got cute prairie dogs and a beautiful sunrise?sage-creek-campground

Badlands National Park

Badlands National Park is truly a divine demonstration of geologic beauty. Featuring a 60-mile multicolored wall of sediment layers, the park is also home to a whole host of buffalo, prairie dogs, and antelope. There’s even an opportunity to gaze at the ancient fossils of extinct creatures. The park is a treasure for all ages.

Rushmore Cave

We all have heard of Mount Rushmore, but how about Rushmore Cave? Wind your way through narrow passageways and view rare geological formations in South Dakota’s ninth largest cave. The guided tours are fun for the whole family, and you even can upgrade your ticket to include a ride on their famed zip-line. Kids also can pick out and crack open their own geodes. It’s a rockin’ time!rushmore-cave

A haven for earth and animal lovers alike, Badlands National Park offers a unique experience in the wild prairies of South Dakota. Get ready to camp under the stars and wake up next to buffalo on your next adventure of a lifetime.

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Southeast Nevada: An outdoor adventurer’s playground

24 Friday Feb 2017

Posted by Coach-Net in Travel Destinations

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Destination, Destination Ideas, Destinations, Nevada, RV Camping, RV Destinations, Travel Destination, US Traveling

southeast-nevadaFrom waterfalls to slot canyons to… aliens?

There’s so much to see and do just outside the bright neon lights of Las Vegas. It’s a veritable outdoor playground for adventurers and explorers to discover! From majestic sandstone arches to twisting slot canyons to lush waterfalls, you could easily spend a few days, a week, or even a month exploring Southeast Nevada… oh, and you might even encounter some extraterrestrial life along the way.

 Little A’Le’Inn

Located right near the notoriously top-secret military base Area 51, the Little A’Le’Inn is a great roadside attraction to stop by during your trip across Nevada. The Little A’Le’Inn triples as a motel, restaurant, and gift shop, where you can stock up on kitschy alien souvenirs. As it’s located pretty much in the middle of nowhere, it’s a welcome sight for travelers. Friendly service, good food, and cold beer can be hard to come by in the middle of the desert, and they provide all of that, plus a few great alien conspiracy theory stories, to boot.Little A'Le'Inn

Tikaboo Peak

The closest (legal) spot to peer into Area 51, Tikaboo Peak offers a rare glimpse into the famed bastion of extraterrestrial lore. The base is still about 26 miles away from the peak, but on a clear day, you can see the buildings as well as aircraft taking off. But, if you’re looking to spot UFOs, bring flashlights and make the trek around sunset… you never know what you might see.

Cathedral Gorge State Park

 Cathedral Gorge State Park is a stop you shouldn’t miss. The park’s bounty of dramatic cathedral-like spires eroded from bentonite clay are fodder for both professional and amateur photographers. Hike a variety of trails to explore the formations, and then take a break at the well-maintained picnic facility. Cathedral Gorge is not just a paradise for geologists; ornithologists will be thrilled with the abundant bird life as well.Cathedral Gorge State Park

Beaver Dam State Park

Featuring deep canyons and rushing streams, Beaver Dam State Park is a relaxing place to spend your day hiking, camping, and fishing. Make sure to check out the Overlook Trail, which gives you a panoramic view of the entire park. The park’s history dates back to 1849, when a family of pioneers named the Hamlins settled down in the area and built a blacksmith shop, house, and schoolhouse for local children. The remains of the Hamlin settlement are still available for public view and are located in the northern part of the park.

Virgin River Canyon

Located within 10 miles of the Arizona, Nevada, and Utah borders, Virgin River Canyon is a delight for people of all ages. The canyon contains two short hiking trails that lead to the Virgin River and provide the opportunity to spot bighorn sheep, which are plentiful in the region. The campground is well maintained and only costs $8.00 per night. If you really want to get away for a night, this is the place to stay!Virgin River Canyon

Lost City Museum-Archaeology

Built to preserve artifacts from southern Nevada, the Lost City Museum is an amazing celebration of human history. With artifacts from a variety of sites along the Muddy River Valley (discovered by explorer Jedediah Smith), the museum now contains a theater, a library, and some outdoor exhibits. The main gallery focuses on Ancestral Puebloans, but you also can check out displays on fossils and ancient baskets, as well as a reconstructed pit house. Wild fact: All of the artifacts were nearly lost under water when the Hoover Dam (then the Boulder Dam) was built. They were excavated just before Lake Mead was created by the dam!

Valley of Fire Slot Canyon

Located along the White Domes Trail in Valley of Fire State Park, the Valley of Fire Slot Canyon is a dream come true for desert landscape-lovers. The 1.1-mile trail loops through an old Western movie set and then brings you to a slot canyon, which features a narrow opening that drops a hundred feet below. Visiting the canyon is a truly magical experience that you won’t want to miss.valley-of-fire-slot-canyon

Arch Rock Campground

For only $10.00 a night, Arch Rock Campground is a great place to bed down. Each campsite is located in a notch in the canyon, providing visitors with a sense of privacy as well as with the ability to get up close and personal with the rock formations. Plus… free showers and dump stations! (Bonus: The facilities are immaculate.) Desert nights can be far colder than desert days, so make sure to pack accordingly.

Mary Jane Falls

Picturesque Mary Jane Falls and its surrounding areas offer a variety of activities, from rock climbing to hiking to just picking wildflowers. The hike up has a pretty steep incline, so get ready to work up a sweat as you make your way to the falls. The payoff is definitely worth it.mary-jane-falls

As you explore the alien legends, desert rock formations, and ancient archaeological sites around Nevada, you’ll forget entirely that the state is mostly known for the bright neon and bustle of Las Vegas. There’s so much more to the state than Sin City, so get ready for the adventure of a lifetime exploring everything Nevada has to offer!

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Amazing Roadside Attractions Planning Tools are a Click Away

02 Friday Dec 2016

Posted by Coach-Net in Travel Destinations

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Destination, Destination Ideas, roadtrip planing, RV Destinations, RV Life, RV travel, Travel, Travel Destination, trip planning

Roadside AttractionsSpontaneous detours are fun but RVers know better than to exit highways on a whim. We understand that it’s not smart to unexpectedly travel down a bumpy dirt road just to see an oddball curiosity like the Alley Oop Museum and Fantasy Land Park in Iraan, Texas. The good news is you don’t have to totally avoid those kitschy roadside attractions when you’re on the move: just plan ahead. These four great roadside attractions planning tools will help you do just that, so you can enjoy all the fun of traveling off-the-beaten path.

Roadtrippers

Roadtrippers is a web and mobile travel planning platform whose unique content covers the wonderful “off the beaten path” places to visit and their unique database contains millions of the world’s most interesting locations. Roadtrippers helps people discover the world around them in an entirely new way by streamlining discovery, planning, booking and navigation into an engaging and intuitive process. The web and mobile applications are free to use.  Their alluring trip guides include exciting categories like Weird Guides, Movie Filming Locations, Ghost Guides, and 48-Hour City Guides.  You must check them out!Devil's Tower

Roadside America

As the name implies, Roadside America covers fun pit stops in all fifty U.S. states, plus Canada. Formed in 1996 by three avid roadtrippers, it’s a kamikaze assortment of big and small detours alike. Planning tools include interactive maps, interesting articles and a semi-regular newsletter about highlighted destinations. Roadside America has a grassroots charm and relies on community members to share information about destination hours, directions and other important details. If hours have changed or a destination has permanently closed, you’ll know before you make the drive.

Roadside America also has the added advantage of an iPhone app. It’s not free, but you have a choice of paying $2.99 to download just one U.S. region or you can take a leap of faith and pay $5.99 for every oddball attraction in the U.S. and Canada. The app is much easier to navigate than the primary website, making this roadside attractions planning tool a great investment.Cadillac Ranch

 

Atlas Obscura

Not only does Atlas Obscura cover thousands of oddball attractions in the U.S., but also on every continent! The creators leave no stone unturned when it comes to sharing fun and funky places from The Thing in Arizona to prehistoric ruins in Zimbabwe. With great writing and amazing photos, Atlas Obscura is easy on the eyes for trip planning purposes. You’ll also find it useful if you’re planning travels into Mexico and beyond.Sears Tower

Find-a-Grave

Are you a “taphophile”? You are if you enjoy looking for interesting epitaphs in cemeteries. Thankfully this website and accompanying app can put you on the highway to heavenly adventure. Simple and functional, Find-a-Grave allows you to search through over 152 million burial sites. You can search by name, claim to fame, death date and more. The only problem? It’s so comprehensive that your searches must be very specific to find who you’re looking for. For example, when I search for “Isaac Hayes” grave, it gives me 144 matches.Find A Graveyard

One of the greatest things about RVing is you’re always within one tank of many fascinating destinations. These roadside attraction planning tools help you find them. And while you won’t add much more time to your journey, you will create many more adventures. The only downside? Once you find all of these interesting detours, it might take you twice as long to get to your original destination.

About the Author:

Rene Agredano, a Coach-Net member since 2015, is a self-employed full-time RVer who enjoys writing, jewelry design and animal advocacy. Her adventures with a three-legged dog and husband Jim are chronicled at LiveWorkDream.com.

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Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks in Winter

16 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by Coach-Net in National Parks, Travel Destinations

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Destination, Destination Ideas, National Park, National Parks, NPS, RV Destinations, RV travel, Travel Destination

National Park sights in winterMost travelers think of summer as the best time to hit national parks – but winter also offers several spectacular sights that make for memorable visits.

So when the snow starts falling, consider a road trip to one of the following parks.

Birders paradise

Winter marks the best time to hike Florida’s Everglades National Park, as the subtropical climate means unbearably hot and muggy summers. Indeed, a number of birds already know this and spend their time in the Everglades after migrating from a northern clime. Among those you can spot on the Anhinga Trail are the double breasted cormorant, great egret, great blue heron, snowy egret, tricolored heron, white ibis and woodstork; turkey vultures congregate during the early morning hours.great blue heron

Wildlife sightings

Leafless trees and snow’s white backdrop makes sighting large wildlife a lot easier in winter than summer. The Warner Point Nature Trail on the south rim of Colorado’s Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park offers the chance to spot elk and Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep. Look for the elk in clearings and the bighorn sheep on the rocky cliff sides.

Bighorn Sheep

Heavy waterfalls

At most parks, waterfalls are most active in spring and early summer, thanks to snow melts. Not so at Washington state’s Olympic National Park. Rain is more likely there during winter, meaning the water flow is higher, making for amore spectacular creeks and falls. One good trail through the park’s lush, old growth forest that ends at a waterfall is the Marymere Falls Trail.

Olympic National Park waterfall

Bearable heat

During summer, unbearable heats makes California’s Death Valley National Park at best a pass through seen from a motor vehicle. The park’s average high in January is a pleasant 67 degrees making winter the perfect time to walk the foreboding desert landscape. Among those sights is the lowest point in North America. Badwater Basin sits 282 feet below sea level and can be accessed in a mile-long round trip hike.

Badwater Basin

 Avoid the crowds

Visitation drops during winter at most parks, so the trade-off for bundling up in coat, cap and gloves is seeing the great scenery without all of the crowds. A good bet is Yosemite National Park’s spectacular Yosemite Valley in California. The Lower Yosemite Fall Trail offers a number of fantastic views of Yosemite Falls in a 1.2-mile loop with the added coolness of falling water frozen in mid-flight on the granite rocks.

Yosemite Falls

About the author:

Rob Bignell is the author of several hiking books, including the bestselling “Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks.”

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Haunted National Parks

26 Wednesday Oct 2016

Posted by Coach-Net in National Parks, The Great Outdoors, Travel Destinations

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Destination, Destination Ideas, Destinations, National Parks, NPS, RV Camping, RV Destinations, RV travel, Travel, Travel Destination, US Traveling

 

Haunted National ParksWhat are the scariest places in the world? Transylvania? A New Orleans cemetery? An abandoned, haunted asylum?

If traveling through the continental United States, try a national park. Though national parks are mainly thought of as places to get back to nature, they’re also great spots to raise the hairs on the back of your neck. Among the frights awaiting are haunted caverns, woodland witches, alien skies, and even stalking bigfoots.

Ghosts

Mammoth Cave National Park

Sightings at the Kentucky caverns date to before the Civil War. They range from apparitions of slaves to the phantom coughs of tuberculosis victims buried at a park cemetery. But the most common sighting is of Stephan Bishop, a former slave who explored the cave and whose remains rest at the Old Guide Cemetery. The best chance of seeing Bishop’s ghost is on the Violet City Lantern Tour, in which you walk through the caverns with only kerosene lamps to light your way.Mammoth Cave

Witches

Great Smoky Mountains National Park

The Cherokees who once resided on the foggy ridges now making up the national park often told the story of Spearfinger, a witch who lured children into the woods and sang them to sleep. Then with her long finger made of sharp obsidian, she’d cut out and eat their livers. She is said to have walked a number of paths on the park’s eastern edge, including what is now the Norton Creek Trail. That trail also is famous for being the site of where a settler was murdered – and of a strange light that leads one safely out of the dark, foreboding woods.Foggy Trail

 Little Grey Men

 Great Sand Dunes National Park

Most visitors who head up the park’s Star Dune so do for the glory of scaling the 750-foot high mountain of sand. Those hikers definitely will want to keep their eyes to sky rather than to their ground below, though. For more than 60 years, numerous flying saucer reports have been made in the San Luis Valley where the sand dunes are located. Among the UFOs reported over the dunes are black triangles, cigar-shaped craft, and hovering multicolored lights. Great Sand Dunes National Park

Mysterious Moving Rocks

Death Valley National Park

In a remote section of Death Valley across a playa known as the Racetrack, large rocks continue to move, leaving tracks in the clay. No one has ever seen them move, but one far-out theory suggests aliens use telekinesis to race the hefty boulders. Though there’s no designated trail, about two miles south of the Grandstand parking area you can walk a half-mile toward the playa’s southeast corner to see the rocks and the paths they’ve meandered. A high-clearance vehicle is needed to reach the parking area.Death Valley Racetrack

 Bigfoot

Yellowstone National Park

The famous sasquatch has been reported at a number of national parks, but recently not one but four were allegedly filmed at this heavily visited park. A 2015 video shows the hairy beasts apparently stalking bison that have just arrived at Old Faithful Geyser for winter. Walk the Old Faithful Boardwalk to follow in their steps.Yellowstone Boardwalk

 Bats

Carlsbad Caverns National Park

OK, Carlsbad Caverns is not haunted, but what would Halloween be without spooky bats? Every sunset from June through October, hundreds of thousands of bats fly out of Carlsbad Cavern’s natural entrance in a tornadic-like spiral to feed for the evening then return at dawn. You can either get an up-close seat at an amphitheater where the bats leave their cave or hike the Chihuahuan Desert Nature Trail, a half-mile loop, and watch the bats disperse across the New Mexican desert.Carlsbad Caverns

About the author:

Rob Bignell is the author of several hiking books, including the bestselling “Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks.”

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Six Best National Park Trails to Enjoy Autumn

21 Wednesday Sep 2016

Posted by Coach-Net in National Parks, Travel Destinations

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Cuyahoga Falls National Park, Death Valley National Park, Destination, Destination Ideas, fall travel, Great Sand Dunes National Park, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Hot Springs National Park, RV Destinations, Shenandoah National Park, Travel, Travel Destination, US Traveling

6 Best National Park Trails in AuitumnAh, autumn – the world appears to have been repainted, as red, gold and sienna orange leaves contrast with the blue sky. For many travelers, fall is their favorite time to hit the road.

But there’s more to see than the leaves. As those they fall to the ground, the landscape opens up, allowing you to spot interesting geological features or terrain that summer’s green foliage keeps hidden. More animal sightings also are possible as birds migrate while mammals gorge in preparation for winter’s cold. As the foliage no longer is as thick, seeing them is easier.

America’s national parks offer a number of great places to experience autumn’s beauty. And with summer vacation over, many of the parks will be less crowded.

Six national parks particularly deliver great autumn experiences for travelers.

 Cuyahoga Falls National Park

Brandywine Falls ranks among the most popular of the Ohio park’s several waterfalls. The area surrounding the falls is gorgeous in October beneath autumn leaves, and the Brandywine Gorge Trail leading to it is shaded almost the entire way by red maples and eastern hemlocks. With a combination of segments from the Stanford Road Metro Parks Bike and Hike Trail, the gorge trail loops 1.5 miles to the falls then back to the trailhead with several crossings of Brandywine Creek.

Cuyahoga Falls National Park

 Great Sand Dunes National Park

Most people visit this Colorado park for the sand dunes soaring 60-plus stories in the sky. There’s more to the park than dunes, though. The Montville Trail provides an excellent sample of that as it heads into the surrounding mountains. The 0.5-mile loop partially runs alongside a creek, where the golden canopy of cottonwood and aspen trees sends you to an autumn wonderland.

Great Sand Dunes National Park

 Great Smoky Mountains National Park

The 1-mile round trip Clingmans Dome Trail heads to the highest spot in the national park and Tennessee and the third tallest east of the Mississippi. Autumn leaves on the road to Clingmans Dome usually change about mid-October, offering a spectacular red, orange and yellow display. At the dome’s top, views of those swaths of harvest colors can stretch for up to a hundred miles in all directions.

Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Hot Springs National Park

Though hardly thoughts of as a backcountry wilderness experience, the Arkansas park does offer a number of forested trails to enjoy. The best in autumn is the Hot Springs Mountain Trail. Heading through a beautiful mixed hardwood and pine forest, the route offers a gorgeous fall leaf display – and cooler temperatures than during muggy summer.

Hot Springs National Park

 Shenandoah National Park

Spectacular autumn color views await day hikers on the Stony Man Trail, a segment of the famous Appalachian National Scenic Trail. At the trail’s top, you’ll be rewarded with an expansive view of the Shenandoah Valley and the Massanutten and Allegheny Mountains beyond, their trees alit in harvest colors, as you breathe in clean, crisp air.

Shenandoah National Park

 Death Valley National Park

OK, there’s no autumn leaves here at all – but September’s cooler temperatures ensure you actually can leave an air conditioned vehicle for a lot longer than a minute to experience the forbidding desert landscape. Among the best places in the California park to visit is the Golden Canyon Interpretive Trail, where you can learn to read rocks that tell the tale of how a lake once here vanished.

Death Valley National Park

About the author:

Rob Bignell is the author of several hiking books, including the bestselling “Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks.”

 

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Fall In Love With Hersheypark Camping Resort

16 Friday Sep 2016

Posted by Coach-Net in Travel Destinations

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Campgrounds, Camping, Hershey, Hershypark, RV Camping, RV Destinations, RV Life, RV travel

Hersheypark Camping ResortWhat kid wouldn’t want to explore a real-life Candyland? What adult wouldn’t want to, either, for that matter? The appeal of the deliciously fun Hersheypark is hard to deny: there are around 70 rides, multiple pools and waterslides, tons of shows, a zoo, and much more… and it’s all themed after your favorite candies. Mmm!

Chocolate World

The main attraction of Hersheypark for many is the theme park. They have 13 roller coasters, ranging from thrilling to gentle (including the first looping rollercoaster on the East Coast, which has been taking fans for a ride since the 1970’s), plus a Ferris wheel, bumper cars, a carousel, and tons more. And don’t forget your swimsuit, because they’ve got a great waterpark as well— it’s the perfect place to beat the summer heat. And make sure to keep your eyes peeled for the costumed characters and fun, family-friendly shows!

Hershey Park

And Hersheypark makes it super easy to RV to this tasty wonderland with their Hersheypark Camping Resort. Two pools, movie nights, live entertainment, fire rings and more make camping out here the perfect way to spend an evening. And top your trip through the park off with— what else? S’mores! It’s the ultimate end to a sweet day of candy-centric fun.

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Taking Your Time: How to Enjoy Our National Parks

13 Tuesday Sep 2016

Posted by Coach-Net in National Parks, Travel Destinations

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National Park, National Parks, RV Camping, RV Destinations, RV Life, RV travel, Travel, Travel Destination, Travel Tips

Enjoying Our National ParksThis travel season we’ve spent time in Great Smoky Mountain National Park, Shenandoah National Park, and Acadia National Park. We’ve also dipped our toes into the Catskills and the White Mountains, along with national and provincial parks in the Canadian Maritimes. Visits to places outside of our National Park system clearly revealed just how special our national parks are.

Acadia National ParkWe didn’t plan it this way, to be spending so much time in a handful of our national parks in this, the year of their 100th anniversary. But we are glad we are doing it. After two years of full-time RVing, we’ve finally arrived at the need for slowness, to enjoy, to savor, and to immerse ourselves in our national parks.

We tackle the parks on two fronts. First, we almost always delve into the history of the park. How did it come to be? Who were the movers and shakers who brought it into existence? In short, what is the story behind the park’s existence?

And second, we get out into the park, to explore the physical and the ethereal parts of these marvelous creations. We drive. We hike. We walk. We picnic. We sit in wonder. We take tons of photos. We go on ranger-led walks. We read all of the signs and the explanatory brochures.  Sometimes we pick up a book and read the history of the people of the park – the ones that stripped the land bare for the lumber or dug into the earth to bring out wealth or grew crops to let nature do the heavy lifting of making new wealth.

Schoodic PeninsulaOne destination we love to visit is Acadia National Park – that gem of land in Maine. We’d been twice before, once for three days, another for just a day. This is barely enough time to take a sip of what is there.  Our most recent trip to Acadia was an eight-day adventure, which included the discovery of a part of the park we did not know existed: the Schoodic Peninsula, way on the north side of the park. You can see it sitting in the waterfront park in Bar Habor, looking directly across the bay. It is a different experience altogether, as the land meeting with the sea reaches out from under the soil and places wide, flat fingers of solid rock out into the ocean.  It’s fun to walk on, explore, and just simply admire.  It really makes the mind wonder how this all actually came about since all explanations are simply theory. I think having a sense of wonder beats the pants off the geological theories of land creation.

We more or less stumbled into Schoodic Peninsula because we were camping on the north side of the park, in a town so small there isn’t a stop sign, much less a traffic light. There we had our first lobster of our Acadia stay, paying a flat $8 a pound for hot lobster brought to our campsite with plates and the special tools you need to squeeze every ounce of meat out of the red shell surrounding it.

Bass Harbor LighthouseFor our stay “in the park”, an RV campground just outside of the Bass Harbor Lighthouse, way down in the southwest corner of Acadia, was just about perfect. It meant a bit more driving but the towns and views were well worth it. Plus we discovered parts of Acadia we would have missed – those tucked away tiny towns with a handful of shops and restaurants. Places where you meet the top professional photographer in his studio, and chat about Acadia and its offerings like friends of years past.

This time, we could take a leisurely stroll around the marvelous carriage trail roads with its many famous and gorgeous stone bridges. Even bumping into a carriage ride, stopping for tourist gawking at the more grandiose of the bridges. The workmen hired by Rockefeller to create these beauties had to be told to back off a bit on their construction so the finished product did not look so perfect. After all, handwork-built stone bridges should have some imperfections.

And this time, we enjoyed a couple of picnics along the cliffs of the cliff road. These stunning granite formations, up against the endless ins and outs of the Atlantic tide, create wondrous cliffs worthy of clambering around and pretending to be an original explorer. While carrying the most traffic in the park, the rocky cliffs are so expansive they never fit the feeling of crowded.

Acadia Mountain ViewThe inland forests make for hikes from the easiest stroll to life-challenging iron rod vertical scrambles. Whichever meets your standard of fitness and daring, you’ll find it here. We passed on the chains and steel rods, and avoided the rappelling classes, thank you very much. But we did hike to the top of Acadia Mountain, a challenging hike up and even more so on the way down. With views to curl your toes, across the forest canopy and out into the lengthy harbors and finally the deep blue ocean that is Acadia. And always surrounding by that musky fir forest smell. Lovely, just lovely.

We tend to be easily enticed by tradition, so it was a given you would find us at the top of Cadillac Mountain at sunrise. Perfectly planned timing wise, but almost a complete bust of a sunrise, with the sun hiding somewhere behind those thick purplish-gray clouds. Still, there is something to be said for welcoming first light to the U.S., and the mountain top itself is a testimony to geological wonder and astounding views.Cadillac Mountain

Of course, along the way we partook of lobster, both rolls and lobster grilled cheese sandwiches. We finally figured out we could enjoy a lot more lobster with a lot less work if we went the lobster roll route. And a local hairdresser steered us to Thurstons, the local hangout for lobster and a harbor-view dining experience without breaking the bank. Only 10 minutes from our campsite, we had to go twice.

The whole point of this lengthy write-up, in addition to encouraging you to go visit our national parks, is this: go and spend some time there, whichever park or parks you choose to visit. Visit fewer parks and go deeper. Explore. Hike. Get to know some locals. Wander off the beaten path. Hit the high points (they are high points for a reason!) Try something new. Dig into the history. Join a ranger-led walk. Touch. Smell. Taste. Feel. Listen. Wonder. Memories are waiting, but the best ones take

Touch. Smell. Taste. Feel. Listen. Wonder. Memories are waiting, but the best ones take time to make.

About the author:

Rob and his wife Jan have been full-timing for the last two years.  Following a lengthy career in marketing and leadership consulting, Rob got the RV bug when in 2010 he secured a sponsored trip to visit 50 national parks over seven months in an Airstream Interstate Class B motorhome. He and Jan lived in the Airstream Interstate for the entire trip.

Taking over 12,000 photos on that 35,000-mile trek set the hook for both RVing and photography. Since concluding the 50 park adventure, Rob’s been an artist-in-residence at Great Smoky Mountains National Park (2012) and Rocky Mountain National Park (2013.) In 2015 he and his wife spent six weeks on the Oregon Coast and in the Columbia Gorge capturing images for the Oregon State Parks.

This year, their plans are taking them up through Shenandoah, Gettysburg, the Catskills, White Mountain and Acadia on the way to spending the month of September in the Canadian Maritime provinces.

You can see Rob’s work at:

http://www.trilliumgallery.com/rob-wilson.html

https://www.facebook.com/RobWilsonSanctuaryPhotos/

http://fineartamerica.com/art/rob+wilson

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Six Great National Parks to See Wildlife

24 Wednesday Aug 2016

Posted by Coach-Net in National Parks, The Great Outdoors, Travel Destinations

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Destination, Destination Ideas, Destinations, National Parks, NPS100, RV Destinations, wildlife

National Park WildlifeAmerica’s national parks are known for their great vistas and fantastic rock formations, but they also preserve another treasure: wildlife.  In fact, national parks rank among the best places to see interesting and rare wildlife. Late summer marks a particularly good time for wildlife viewing at many parks as most mothers bring out their young by that time of the year.

Given the breadth of national park locations, there’s also the opportunity to see almost every kind of North American wildlife, from those that live on mountains, in marine environments, and in the tropics to those that make their homes on prairies, deserts, and in temperate forests.

Mountains

Travelers can explore the “Serengeti of North America” on the Lamar Valley Trail at Wyoming’s Yellowstone National Park. Like the mountain-ringed African plain, Lamar Valley serves as home to the classic megafauna that defines North America. Bison, elk, grizzlies, black bears, wolves, coyotes, eagles, osprey and more all can be found at this high elevation. Coyotes also can be seen wandering about, looking for a meal while bald eagles and osprey grace the skies. Grizzlies reside in the hilly woods, but they and the area’s other big two predators – black bears and wolf packs – prefer to remain under cover than be seen.Black bear

Marine

You can encounter an array of marine wildlife on the Beach Trail at Alaska’s Glacier Bay National Park. Low tide also provides an opportunity to see intertidal life. As the waters retreat into the ocean – and water levels here can fall 25 vertical feet, among the greatest extremes in the world – a number of animals and plants are exposed. Don’t be surprised to spot starfish and snails on the sands and grasses. On shore, a variety of sea birds gather and fly over, often nabbing exposed intertidal creatures for a meal. During those first moments of sunlight, watch for humpback whales, harbor porpoise, puffins, sea otters, and Steller sea lions, frolicking and feeding in the mouth of the bay. Bring binoculars. If lucky, you’ll also hear the blow of humpback whales.Humpback whale

Tropics

Tropical wildlife can be safely seen from the Anhinga Trail at Florida’s Everglades National Park. The trail’s boardwalk takes you over open water where you can watch for alligators peeking out of a river, as well as turtles, herons and egrets. Winter marks the best season to see the most wildlife. A number of birds spend their time in the Everglades after migrating from a northern clime. Among those you can spot are the double-crested cormorant, great egret, great blue heron, snowy egret, tricolored heron, white ibis and wood stork. Turkey vultures congregate in the marsh during the early morning hours.Alligator

Prairies

North America’s largest mammal – the bison – freely roams North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt National Park, and the Buckhorn Trail is an excellent place to spot them and other Great Plains wildlife. The trail includes a prairie dog town that stretches for about a mile. You’ll be able to spot them barking from their burrow entrances as they keep an eye out for predators. Hawks, coyotes and rattlesnakes are among the creatures hoping to make an unsuspecting prairie dog its dinner.Bison

Deserts

Four desert ecosystems can be found in North America, and the park closest to a major metro area offers among the best spots to see wildlife of these dry climes. Outside of Tucson, Ariz., Saguaro National Park’s Douglas Spring Trail crosses the Rincon Mountain District (Saguaro Park East), providing the chance to see coyotes, roadrunners, jackrabbits and quail. All four of those creatures thrive in the Sonoran Desert, which stretches across Arizona and northern Mexico, as well as good portions of the continent’s other three desert ecosystems.

jackrabbit

Temperate forests

Great Smoky Mountains National Park, though stretching across the Appalachian Mountains, offers the opportunity to see many of the animals that reside in temperate forests covering much of the continent east of the Mississippi River. The Deep Creek/Indian Falls trails in the park’s North Carolina section sports Eastern cottontail rabbit, groundhogs, river otter, and white-tailed deer. Also present but much more elusive, as they keep to themselves, are black bear, bobcat, coyote, red fox, red wolf, and wild boar.

white-tail deer

About the author:

Rob Bignell is the author of several hiking books, including the bestselling “Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks.”

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