bcla
On our rugged Eastern foothills.....
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2012
- Messages
- 25,732
Oh there is definitely more than the NPS, but the NPS has my heart!
We visited Mount St Helens on a trip 5 years ago and enjoyed it immensely.
I definitely didn't say that I have visited all of the sites!!! I said that I have been to 33 National Parks and dozens and dozens of other sites run by the NPS. I'm not exactly sure how many, I'd have to sit and count them out!
NPS has over 400 sites now, but some are a little bit nebulous on what is or isn't a site. I downloaded the NPS app in anticipation of a visit this summer (great for downloading info for use later without internet access) but they have a list of sites. Some aren't really designated units, like Alcatraz as part of Golden Gate National Recreation Area, along with some places that are managed together even though they have separate designations. Like Sequoia and Kings Canyon, or Golden Gate National Recreation Area which manages Muir Woods and Fort Point.
And certainly it's very difficult to visit the parks in the western US without coming into contact with Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management areas. I visited Timpanagos Cave National Monument and had to go through fee station at Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest to get there, although it looks like a fee is no longer required if one says they're going there. Many of the major national parks in the west are surrounded by national forests and BLM lands. And occasionally they administer national monuments together. I even remember visiting a few NPS visitor centers where they actually had Forest Service Rangers stationed as a cooperative effort. And of course they have Smokey Bear.
