Category: Boondocking

  • Devils Tower National Monument

    Devils Tower National Monument

    Devils Tower, has been known by several different names, some of those include: “Bear’s House” “Great Gray Horn” or “Brown Buffalo Horn”. Devils Tower rises 1,267 feet (386 m) above the Belle Fourche River and can be seen from miles away.

  • Hill Cumorah – Palmyra, New York

    Hill Cumorah – Palmyra, New York

    In geological terms this “hill” located in upstate New York is technically considered a drumlin: a low oval mound that is part of a group of little hills composed of compacted boulder clay that was molded by past glacial action

  • Bryce Canyon National Park

    Bryce Canyon National Park

    One of the Big 5 Parks in Utah, Bryce Canyon National Park is a photographers dream and a hikers paradise. Located near the historic western town of Panguich, Utah

  • Kirtland Temple – Kirtland, Ohio

    Kirtland Temple – Kirtland, Ohio

    In the first few years of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, founder, Joseph Smith received instructions how to build a temple. That temple was to be built in Kirtland, Ohio. Built from sandstone. It also took years of labor but the temple was completed on March 27, 1836.

  • The San Rafael Swell

    The San Rafael Swell

    Outside of the amazing geologic features there is something about ancient peoples, RD Swasey’s cowboys, and a couple dinosaur footprints that draws visitors to the San Rafael Swell. We’re intrigued by past inhabitants and the way individuals interacted with the land.

  • Mesa Verde National Park

    Mesa Verde National Park

    President Theodore Roosevelt established Mesa Verde National Park to “preserve the works of man,” the first national park of its kind. The park occupies 52,485 acres near the Four Corners region of the American Southwest.