Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Capital Reef National Park

Approximately 150 miles west of Blanding Utah, beyond the Glen Canyon Recreation Area, lies Capital Reef National Park.

Canyonlands National Park

Canyonlands National Park was the second destination in our quest to visit all the National Parks in Utah. Being only about 25 miles from our campsite, the northern, Island in the Sky area is where we spent the morning. In typical Moab fashion, there is Jeep access into the canyon as well as the hiking and biking trails found in all national parks.

Arches National Park

Double Arch
It was my intention to write one blog post named The Utah Five and cover all five of the national parks in Utah. After visiting all five, I decided that due to the unique features of each, they all deserved their own post. There is no particular reason I am showing you Arches first other than it was the first one we visited. That trend will continue.

Friday, August 26, 2016

Blanding Utah


After leaving the Moab area, we traveled south a few miles to Blanding Utah and the Recapture Recreation area. This is another BLM area that allows free camping and just happens to have a small lake.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Moab Utah

We went to Moab because there are two National Parks in the area. Both Arches and Canyonlands are near Moab and will be covered in another post.

Friday, August 12, 2016

South Bound

Just south of Yellowstone National Park is Grand Teton National Park. After looking over the list of attractions at the later, we decided the only thing it had to offer that Yellowstone did not was the Tetons. So we basically did a drive by, spending one night in the campground at The Gros Ventre Campground at the southern end of the park.

Sunday, August 7, 2016

Yellowstone

C &  L  On The Road left the Mt. Rushmore area on the morning of the third day heading west to a place called Yellowstone. Clara had never been there, it was high on her bucket list. I had been once as a teenager (yeah about 50 years ago) so I had some bucket left to fill on this one too.

Mt. Rushmore

From the Buffalo Gap National Grasslands, we drove to the Oreville Campground near Hill City South Dakota. This is a National Forest campground with no hook ups although there is water in the camp and pit toilets.


We had a thunder storm complete with hail one day and this is the only picture I got of the campground. If you would like more information, The official National Forest Service website is linked above.

The evening of our 1st day found us at the national monument called Mt. Rushmore.

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Sunday Afternoon Entertainment

We left Badlands National Park on Sunday morning and drove about 50 miles to a popular motorcycle and four wheeler riding area in the Buffalo Gap National Grasslands. Having already picked a National Forest campground near Mt. Rushmore that had walk in sites available for Monday, Monday morning seemed the proper arrival time.

Badlands National Park

Badlands National Park is on the way to Mt. Rushmore from the east so, even though it really wasn't on anybody's bucket list, ( and that senior pass saved us the $15.00 entry fee ) we stopped to take a look.

South Dakota isn't Cool Either

Well you all know by now that the number one destination on this trip is Mt, Rushmore. So it should come as no surprise that we found ourselves in Kennebec SD. There is a sign along the road that posses the question you all may be asking "Where the heck is Kennebec?". The whole reason for our stop here was the Lake Byre Recreational Area.

Being Tourists

After leaving Pittsburg Mo. we did a short drive to a free campground just outside of Osborn Mo. The Pony Express Lake Conservation area is made up of 740 acres of old fields and over 1000 acres of grasslands.