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This is the discussion thread for a recent post on GTPlanet:
This article was published by Joe Donaldson (@Joey D) on August 5th, 2018 in the Car Culture category.
Not sure if you're already aware, but I think you might have posted your address in that pic...This will be my trip to Colorado in October. Really looking forward to it.
From the parks I've visited I'd say that you can drive in one side and out the other more often than not, obviously depending on the geography of the place. Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grand Canyon, Craters of the Moon, Colorado National Monument and Petrified Forest all have more than one entrance and exit if I remember correctly (though at Yosemite the valley itself is largely one way in and out). Only one I've personally been to that's one way in and out is Pinnacles in California, and that's because there's a mountain in the way@R1600Turbo what I meant by a "through road" is that there's not just one entrance or exit. Pretty much every park save for the Grand Tetons I've been to pretty much make you enter at one station, go deep into the park, then turn around and go back the way you came. At least with the Colorado National Monument, I could enter in Grand Junction and end up in Fruita. I suppose I probably could've worded it better.
Nope.Not sure if you're already aware, but I think you might have posted your address in that pic...
Love American place names though.
"So what should we call this town?"
"I dunno, but I see'd a dead horse just a half mile down the road"
"Dead Horse it is"
According to legend, Dead Horse Point got its name because the mesa top served as a natural corral with tall vertical cliffs on every side but one. Only a narrow neck of land some 30 yards wide connected Dead Horse Point to the much larger mesa called the Island in the Sky, now part of Canyonlands National Park. Local ranchers herded the wild mustangs living nearby onto Dead Horse Point, then closed the gate on the short stretch of fence they built across the neck of land to prevent the horses’ escape. After selecting the best horses for their own use, the culls, called broomtails, were allowed to escape. On one occasion, however, either the gate was left closed or the horses were unable to find their way out. All died of thirst within sight of the Colorado River flowing through the abyss below.