Nevada National Parks
Nevada national parks offer the brave of heart the hottest place
on earth while also providing unique “cold” deserts. Take the time
to cool off from the desert sun to recreate at its lakes and walk
trails in memorial to westward migration.

Visit These Nevada National Parks:
California National Historic Trail: The road
to California carried over 250,000 gold-seekers & farmers to
the gold fields & rich farmlands of California during the
1840's and 1850's - the greatest mass migration in American
history. More than 1,000 miles of trail ruts and traces can still
be seen in the vast undeveloped west – reminders of the sacrifices,
struggles, and triumphs of early American travelers and
settlers.
California Trail Ratings
Death Valley National Park: Hottest, Driest,
Lowest: A superlative desert of streaming sand dunes,
snow-capped mountains, multicolored rock layers, water-fluted
canyons and three million acres of stone wilderness.
Home to the Timbisha Shoshone and to plants and
animals unique to the harshest deserts. A place of legend
and a place of trial. Death Valley.
Great Basin National Park: In the shadow of
13,063-foot Wheeler Peak, 5,000 year old bristlecone pine trees
grow on rocky glacial moraines. Come to Great Basin National Park
to experience the solitude of the desert, the smell of sagebrush
after a thunderstorm, the darkest of night skies, and the
beauty of Lehman Caves. Far from a wasteland, the Great Basin is a
diverse region that awaits your discovery.
Great Basin Weather
Lake Mead National Recreation Area: Lake
Mead National Recreation Area offers a wealth of things to do and
places to go year-round. Its huge lakes cater to boaters, swimmers,
sunbathers, and fishermen while its desert rewards hikers, wildlife
photographers, and roadside sightseers. It is also home to
thousands of desert plants and animals, adapted to survive in an
extreme place where rain is scarce and temperatures soar.
Lake Mead Weather
Lake Mead Ratings
Old Spanish National Historic Trail: Take a
journey across the Southwest on the Old Spanish National Historic
Trail between Santa Fe and Los Angeles for history, culture, and
scenic beauty.
Old Spanish Trail Ratings
Pony
Express National Historic Trail: The legend of the "the Pony,"
as it was affectionately known, may overshadow its brief history,
but the bold founders and brave riders of the Pony Express helped
spread important news, shrink a continent, and bind a nation that
was being torn apart by civil war.
Life of the
Pony Express Riders: Hires ranged from teenagers to about age
40. Weight restrictions were strict.
History of Mail Delivery
Before and After the Pony Express: Officially the Pony
Express ceased operations with the completion of the
transcontinental telegraph on October 26, 1861. The Pony made its
last run on November 20, 1861. It completed some 300 runs each way
over 600,000 miles and carried more than 33,000 pieces of mail.
Pony Express Ratings
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