Ecola State Park
Ecola’s landscape has been described as “…the grandest and most pleasing prospects which my eyes ever surveyed,” by Captain William Clark (1806).
Ecola’s landscape has been described as “…the grandest and most pleasing prospects which my eyes ever surveyed,” by Captain William Clark (1806).
If you’re looking for one of the most remote, rugged, and spectacular wilderness sanctuaries left in America, Glacier Bay is your place!
The ‘Crown of the Continent’ has over 700 miles worth of hiking trails. You will experience the awe-inspiring beauty of glacier carved mountains and valleys, crystal clear alpine lakes, and wildlife at its finest.
Extending 186 miles, with nearly 2,000 miles of shoreline, Lake Powell has become a top destination for boaters.
Commonly considered to be in the Boreal Life Zone, the North Rim is habitat to black bears, porcupines, elk, mountain lions, and the unique Kaibab squirrel found nowhere else in America!
At 15 miles across and one-mile-deep, the Grand Canyon is a World Heritage Site in northwestern Arizona that’s truly a marvel to behold.
The mountains of Wyoming’s Teton Range, braided by the twisting Snake River in the Jackson Hole valley, begin innocently at 7,000 ft sagebrush meadows and then suddenly rise to 13,770 ft. summits like the Grand.
These southern Appalachian Mountains are among the oldest mountains in the world and invite you to a slower pace of life: one filled with layers upon layers of hills, thick green forests, open meadows, towering trees, winding trails, and rocky cliffs.
Isle Royale is one of the least visited national parks in the United States, a destination for those who love the very remote and rugged.
On the south central coastline of Alaska you’ll feel like you stepped back in time, to a time when much of the continent was covered with glaciers. This heavily glaciated park is over 51% covered in ice!