Sure, it’s famous for being the hottest place on earth in the summer months, but that’s all the more reason to visit in the spring when daytime highs will only be in the low-80s
Joshua Tree National Park is in southern California near the city of Palm Springs, and straddles two distinct desert ecosystems: the Mojave and the Colorado.
Though this iconic spot is easily one of the most photographed places in the world, there’s nothing quite like standing on the canyon rim and taking it all in with your own eyes.
In eastern Utah just north of the town of Moab lies Arches National Park, home to more than 2,000 natural red sandstone rock arches carved by wind and time.
Canyonlands National Park is less than ten miles from Arches and a great Spring Break destination for all the same reasons as its neighbor.
Easily one of the best National parks in a state that’s chock full of them, Zion is down in southwest Utah and centers around Zion Canyon, which frankly should be on everyone’s bucket list.
Few, if any, of America’s National Parks offer as diverse a landscape as Washington's Olympic National Park, which protects a vast wilderness on the Olympic Peninsula
Many of us visit the wilderness seeking solitude and you’ll find that in large doses in Big Bend National Park at virtually any time of year.