While You’re Out There… Eight unsung parks also worth a visit The crown jewels are wondrous sights, but they’re by no means the be-all and end-all of American parks. In fact, only 50 of the National Park Service’s 361 sites are properly called parks; the rest are national monuments, battlefields, historic sites, memorials, recreation areas, rivers, lakeshores, seashores, and parkways. These areas may be less known and less acclaimed, but Big Thicket National Preserve, Texas. Magnolias grow within sight of cacti here at what’s known as the biological crossroads of America. Six ecosystems converge on 86,000 acres where you can canoe, bird-watch, fish, or hike the three-mile Kirby Nature Trail leading from hardwood forest to cypress slough. Entrances to Big Thicket’s 12 land parcels Cape Lookout National Seashore, North Carolina. Accessible only by boat, these three barrier islands (Portsmouth Island, South Core Banks, and Shackleford Island) stretch south from crowded Cape Hatteras for 55 isolated miles. Loggerhead turtles nest along the coast, wild horses comb the beach on Shackleford, and visitors swim, fish for red drum Gateway National Recreation Area, New York and New Jersey. Unless the view is exceptionally clear from the dune tops, you’ll never guess that this wilderness is just 25 miles from Manhattan. Here you can wander the seven-mile beach and 160-acre holly forest at Sandy Hook, fish for flounder off Canarsie Pier, or watch for 300 species of birds in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming. Often overshadowed by its flashy neighbor, Yellowstone, Grand Teton features dramatic peaks that rise to 13,770 feet and stretch ten miles wide. You can climb mountains, paddle Snake River whitewater, fish for lake or cutthroat trout, hike 250 miles of high-country trails, and watch for bison, elk, pronghorns, Great Basin National Park, nevada. Who says Nevada is all desert? Great Basin’s 77,100 acres span seven life zones, including high alpine country that rises straight out of the sagebrush to 13,000 feet; 5,000-year-old bristlecone pine forests; a small glacier; Lehman Caves, dripping with stalactites; and 13,063-foot Wheeler Peak, the highest Hovenweep National Monument, Utah and Colorado. The Ute name means “deserted valley”–an apt title for this 784-acre park, one of the last in the national park system to be staffed by just two rangers. Access to five of these six clusters of Anasazi dwellings from the Pueblo III Period (A.D. 1100-1300) is over rough roads; once there, you can hike Isle Royale National Park, Michigan. Only 16,000 visitors make the ferry or seaplane trip each summer to this rugged Lake Superior island, the least-visited site in the entire national park system. They come to hike 166 miles of trails, fish 22 inland lakes, and kayak the shoreline. The rest of the year, the place is left to timber wolves, lynx, Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota. At 66.1 miles, ten of which were mapped and added only last year, this is the third-longest cave in the United States. The Park Service offers cave tours year round, but claustrophobes can hike 30 miles of trails in the mixed-grass prairie above. Keep your eyes open for the park’s herd of 300 bison, as well as |
While You’re Out There…
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