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Old Jul 15th, 2005, 03:18 AM
  #21  
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Okay, it dosen't have to be about nature. I guess I was just thinking that Ft. Mchenry was a national historic site and not a national park. That's alright. Mesa Verde is another historic one I like, but also has scenery.
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Old Jul 15th, 2005, 02:39 PM
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I really should get back to Fort McHenry, it is only 20 miles from me. Does it have any trails? I can understand your point as it is a important historic site and is interesting to see a War of 1812 era Fort. It is a good place to go see if you live in the area or are vacationing in Washington DC or Maryland. Anotherwards, if you can't get out of the area.
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Old Jul 15th, 2005, 05:00 PM
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For mountains: Glacier - just beautiful - or North Cascades. Yosemite was great 40 years ago, but just overrun in the summer now.

For water: Biscayne (Florida) - sailing, kayaking, snorkeling, even glass-bottom boat trips. And most people don't even know it's there!
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Old Jul 15th, 2005, 05:15 PM
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Yosemite: Tuolumne Meadows and the High Sierra as well as the valley.

Golden Gate National Recreation Area/Seashore.

-Bill
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Old Jul 15th, 2005, 06:06 PM
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The Tetons and Bryce Canyon. Volcano's was pretty interesting because it is what it is, but nothing beats the Tetons.
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Old Jul 15th, 2005, 06:10 PM
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Sequoia.

Gotta love those big trees. I want my ashes scattered in the Giant Forest.
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Old Jul 16th, 2005, 03:36 AM
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Fort McHenry is a national monument and historic shrine. It has a walk that circles the park along the water. On a nice day, there will be lots of sailboats, as well as commercial vessels. It's a little gem of a park, right on the edge of a very urban area with commerical docks, a dense neighbourhood, I-95 and train-tracks. Part of its charm is the green space it offers to the neighbours.

I was on the Patriots of Fort McHenry Board for a number of years before i moved to the UK, so know the place quite well.

Superintendents of this park have gone on to head Arches National Park and Glen Canyon.
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Old Jul 16th, 2005, 04:20 AM
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mountain parks, jasper in alberta, then glacier, then rainier

desert/canyon parks canyonlands, then arches then capitol reef

honorable mention Denali, great smokies, yellowstone
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Old Jul 16th, 2005, 05:55 AM
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Close to home: Cape Cod National Seashore - 43,000 acres of shoreline in Massachusetts (with 40 miles of beach).

Haleakala - Kula, Maui ... AWESOME; Denali - Alaska ... AMAZING!

We have visited many and find they're all such amazing spots. Whether it's a canyon or a mountain, or a historic monument ... I'm glad they've been preserved...

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Old Jul 16th, 2005, 06:01 AM
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Fairfax- On the topic of historic forts, have you been to Fort Washington National Historical Park in Maryland and Fort Necessity in Pennsylvanna? Fort Necessity isn't much but a row of sticks but still is the interesting site of a French and Indian War Battle. Fort Washington I have not been to yet, but I think it is similar to Fort Mchenry.
Crefloors- The Tetons are amazing, one of the most beautiful national parks I have seen yet. Did you hike some of the Cascade Canyon Trail? That hike is just incredible. Second to the Teton, it would be a tie between Yellowstone and Yosemite, Yosemite for the scenry and Yellowstone for the interesting geothermal features, the wildlife, and the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone and Yellowstone Falls which I consider the most scenic place in Yellowstone.
Again thanks for your opinions-
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Old Jul 16th, 2005, 11:41 AM
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I have been to Fort Washington... it's pretty interesting. Not been to the one in PA.
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Old Jul 16th, 2005, 04:51 PM
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Our citizens vote on this issue each year by their attendance- the best vote!
The long time only champion by almost three times the vote of the the runner-up is the undefeated, undisputed defending champion- The Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
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Old Jul 16th, 2005, 09:42 PM
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Yes, the Great Smoky Mountains National Park attracts the largest number of visitors annually of any national park but a lot of that has to do with the fact 60 percent of the nation's population lives within a 500 mile radius (or one day drive) of the Smoky Mountains."

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/gmdhtml/nphtml/gsmhome.html

Utahtea

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Old Jul 17th, 2005, 04:20 AM
  #34  
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The Great Smokey Mountains are awesome. But, they are a 500-600 mile drive from my house which makes it a long one day car trip. Have not been there in a while, probably last time I was there was 6-7 years ago.
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Old Jul 17th, 2005, 05:24 AM
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asdaven: well, my dad, older brother, and I, hiked up to Amphetheater Lake, and being that I was about 13 at the time, I will have to say that was one of the most miserable days of my life!!!! LOL The trail was all switch backs and as I'm sitting on the side of the trail catching my breath, some SMART people rode by on horseback. We got caught in a raging thunder and lightning storm on the way back down, and my brother had an argument with a moose about exactly who's trail it actually was. The moose won by the way.
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Old Jul 18th, 2005, 03:34 AM
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Where is Amphetheater Lake? It sounds familiar.
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Old Jul 24th, 2005, 04:33 AM
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Fairfax- I went to Fort Mchenry, it was very neat. I saw a lot more than I saw the first time. I walked the path around the water, I couldn't figure out where the Fort Mchenry Tunnel and the Harbor Tunnel went under the water. But it was neat seeing the big huge ships coming in and out. I saw the film on Fort Mchenry and it was very moving. At the end of the movie, the curtains open automatically so you could see the fort and they sung the National Anthem right where it was made. The fort was cool to climb down into the "saferooms" and where they stored gunpowder and amunition. Very, very interesting. I would highly recommend if you were visiting the Washington-Baltimore area. Out of all the sites in Baltimore, I would say Fort Mchenry is the best and a must see. Fairfax, have you been to Anteitam and Gettysburg battlefields?
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Old Jul 24th, 2005, 01:23 PM
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I am so glad you had the chance to go! The film is really interesting, and when the curtains open, if the big 30' x 40' flag is flying, it is awe-inspiring. If you took the path around the fort, out by the wetlands, that's where the Fort McHenry tunnel enters the water. The wetlands were created by the earth from the tunnel. Although the two tunnels come out on the north side at the same place, the Harbor tunnel comes out on the south side a couple miles to the south of the FOMC tunnel.

I have been to both battlefields, and they're interesting. My greatx3 grandfather was the Commisary General for the Confederate Army. My family's land grant in the US was what's now Fairfax County.

Right now, I am living and working in Wales, where I am having a brilliant time exploring the ring of castles that follow the coast. I am lucky enough to be working in a 12th century castle, once owned by William Randolf Hearst. WAY COOL!
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Old Jul 27th, 2005, 04:21 AM
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I have a question, when I say the film, the small flag was flying, but later in the day, the big one was flying, why wasn't the big one flying all along. Fairfax-Have you ever seen the illumination at the Anteitam Battlefield where they light up 23,000 to 24,000 candles to honor the soldiers who died in the battle?
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