Using the checklist Ann gave me I've got my list up to 13. There are a couple my
family went to when I was a child that I haven't been able to get back to and a
couple more I haven't ... I added Sequoia National Park to the list because we
went through it on the way from my aunts (mom's sister) house in Sylmar, CA to
Yosemite.
And Saguaro National Park that wasn't yet a National Park (it was still a
National Monument) when we visited it going out to California.
Like I said, I took two trips to California with my family once in 1960 and
again in 1964. The first trip we went via Oklahoma where we picked up Route 66
and the second trip we went down through Atlanta and followed I-20 west to I-10
On 9/1/2020 10:37:25, ann sanfedele wrote:
I cant resist giving you guys my numbers now.. with relatively brief
explaination of how I managed it.
Printed out the list of 62 NP's and checked off 45 for sure and a couple of more
with question marks
because I was likely there as a child before they were designated as National
Parks. all 45 are those that
can be reached by car and are either in the contiguous 48 or in Alaska. Been in
every state but HAwaii.
My father was old enough to be my grandfather when I wsa born.. he was,
unfortuantely, something of a boozer
and had some problems with heart - in January 1945 he was "retired" from a
sales management job
when he though he was going to be promoted and given only a few months
severance.. something I didn't know
until recently (that is, the reasons). A lot of what contributed to my having
seen 44 of the 48 states before I was
12 was our trips were , post war, partly business trips as Pop's old cronies
from the salad days gave him sales jobs
and he took my mother and me with him. Traveling before 1945 was for pleasure
and visiting family, but parents
were always interested in the parks. Mammoth Cave was a strong memory from
childhood.
I lived in Maine in the 60's - so there was Acacia.. took geology in college
which got me to Yellowstone on a field trip.
Then I met Richard in 1980 , who had travelled widely in Europe and Asia but
didn't know the USA - so road trips began..
and most of the parks on the list were visited with him, sometimes for the
second time, many for the first.
I kept taking them on my own after I lost him in 1993.. Because Richard hit
senior landmark when we were
together I got my Golden Age Passport card and I still have it, hoping to be
able to use it again one day. I think
it is supposed to be good for the National Monuments as well.
ann
On 9/1/2020 1:29 AM, John Francis wrote:
On Mon, Aug 31, 2020 at 11:04:25AM -0400, John wrote:
I've been to 5 of them as an adult; 7 if you count Yosemite that my parents
took the kids to see back during one of the two California trips that
included me.
Hmm. I'm pretty sure I've been to more than that. Let's see:
Acadia, Bryce Canyon, Death Valley, Grand Canyon, King's Canyon, Sequoia,
Yosemite, Zion.
(It certainly helps living in California; all but one of those we've visited
by driving
from home since we moved here 25 years ago. Acadia we visited when we lived
back east,
and took our local Girl Scout troop camping in Acadia one year).
I've been to Yosemite more than once. Larry and I took a quick trip out there
when I had
just purchased my K5. One of these years I'll get out there during the spring
snowmelt.
My bucket list includes Joshua Tree and the parks in Oregon and Washington
(state).
I suppose I should visit my closest one, too - Pinnacles - it's visible from
around here.
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Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
Religion - Answers we must never question.
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