US Destinations

Catskills/Adirondacks, New York

Did You Know? Adirondack Park is larger than the Everglades, Glacier, Grand Canyon and Yellowstone parks combined. The Woodstock festival of 1969 was held on a farm in Bethel. “The Last of the Mohicans” is set in the Adirondacks and “Rip Van Winkle” in the Catskills. “Dirty Dancing” (1987) was

2012-01-16T17:30:03-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Destinations, US Touring Areas|

Cascades/Mount Rainier/ski areas, Washington

Did You Know? Mount Baker recorded the world’s heaviest snowfall in the 1998-1999 winter — 1,140 inches, nearly 100 feet. More than half of all glaciers in the contiguous 48 states are in the region called the North Cascades. Mount Rainier’s glaciers are the source of six major rivers. The

2012-01-16T17:29:38-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Destinations, US Touring Areas|

Cape Cod, Massachusetts

Did You Know? Before Plymouth, the Pilgrims landed at Provincetown where they wrote the Mayflower Compact framing their plans for self-governance. Old King’s Highway on Cape Cod is the largest contiguous historic district in the U.S. Screen legend Bette Davis was once an usherette at the Cape Playhouse. Eugene O’Neill

2012-01-16T17:29:12-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Destinations, US Touring Areas|

Bucks County, Pennsylvania

Did You Know? George Washington’s famous 1776 crossing of the Delaware started from a riverbank in Bucks County. Tiles from Doylestown’s Moravian Pottery and Tile Works were used in Monte Carlo’s casino. Ringing Rocks Park is full of rocks that ring hollow when struck with a hammer. The Bristol-to-Easton Delaware

2012-01-16T17:27:57-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Destinations, US Touring Areas|

Brown County/Art Colony, Indiana

Did You Know? Brown County hosts the world’s longest-running bluegrass festival, dating from 1967. Artists came to rural Indiana for its vistas, inspired by the Impressionists who painted in the countryside. County village names include Bean Blossom and Gnaw Bone, not to mention Stone Head. Brown County only has three

2012-01-16T17:27:06-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Destinations, US Touring Areas|

Bozeman/Big Sky ski area, Montana

Did You Know ... ? Much of “A River Runs Through It” (1992) was filmed in and around Bozeman. Montana-born newscaster Chet Huntley conceived the idea for Big Sky Resort and was a founding investor (1969). Moonlight Basin was America’s first new destination ski resort in 20 years when it

2012-01-16T17:26:25-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Destinations, US Touring Areas|

Blue Ridge Parkway/Skyline Drive, Virginia

Did You Know? The Blue Ridge Parkway is the most visited unit in the U.S. national park system. When first contemplated, Skyline Drive was to be a dead-end road. Thomas Jefferson bought the Natural Bridge (15 miles from the parkway) from King George III (1774). The Roanoke Farmers Market is

2012-01-16T17:25:58-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Destinations, US Touring Areas|

Blue Ridge Mountains, Georgia

Did You Know? Rocks from the Blue Ridge eastern slope date back as much as 1.2 billion years. Etowah Indian mounds, in the Blue Ridge foothills, are North America’s largest such mounds. Dahlonega had the largest gold-mining operation east of the Mississippi. Peanuts are an ingredient in dynamite. Cherokee Indians

2012-01-16T17:25:29-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Destinations, US Touring Areas|
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