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National Parks

EXPLORE THE PARKS

National Park Guides

Real itineraries from the parks I’ve actually visited, hiked, and explored, built for travelers who actually go. Start with the 2026 Fees & Reservations Guide

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The National Park Guides I Wish I’d Had

I’ve spent the last three years driving the country full-time with my partner Brian and our three dogs, two huskies, Loki and Freya, and our supermutt Caly, and somewhere along the way, I’ve explored 20+ national parks. I’m not a ranger, and I’m not a guidebook. I’m the person who shows up at the Mather Point parking lot at 5:14 a.m. because I want the rim to myself, who’s been kicked off Cadillac Mountain by fog at sunrise, and who stood in Lamar Valley on a cold fall morning with frozen eyelashes and no jacket, counting wolves.
These national park guides are written for the way most of us actually travel, limited time, real budgets, a dog (or three) in the back seat, and a healthy desire to skip the worst of the crowds. You’ll find one-day itineraries for parks where most people give themselves a week, off-season strategies that turn shoulder months into the best months, and the kind of practical detail you only get from someone who’s parked the car, hiked the trail, and figured out where the bathrooms actually are.
Inside, you’ll find deep guides to Zion, the Grand Canyon, Acadia, Yellowstone, Badlands, and the Great Smokies, plus seasonal strategy posts on winter visits, 2026 timed-entry reservations, sunrise and sunset photography spots, and the wildlife hotspots most visitors miss. I’ve got so many more National Park locations and guides to add! Whether you’ve got one day or one week, start with the park you’re going to next, and if you’re still deciding, the 2026 Fees & Reservations guide is the best place to plan.

Featured Park Guides

Read the guides →

Zion National Park

Zion National Park Guide

One Day at Zion

First-Timer’s Guide To The Grand Canyon

Yellowstone First-Timer Guide

Lamar Valley Wildlife Guide

Schoodic Peninsula in Acadia

Epic Sunrise and Sunset Grand Canyon South Rim

Epic Grand Canyon Sunrise & Sunset Locations

Black bear in Cades Cove in Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Your Guide To Cades Cove

One Day At Badlands

Plan For The Time You Have

One-Day Park Itineraries

One Day In Yellowstone

One Day In Badlands

One Fall Day At Shenandoah

“There can be nothing in the world more beautiful than the Yosemite, the groves of the giant sequoias and redwoods, the Canyon of the Colorado, the Canyon of the Yellowstone, the Three Tetons; and our people should see to it that they are preserved for their children and their children’s children forever, with their majestic beauty all unmarred.” – Theodore Roosevelt

Wildlife & Specialty Guides

Wildlife Watching In Cades Cove

Fundy National Park Guide – Parks Canada

Lamar Valley Animal Spotting Guide

The Park Trip Planner I Send My Friends

Get my 2026 National Parks planning cheat sheet with timed-entry windows, best months by park, and the gear that actually matters. One email, no fluff.

National Park FAQs

Honestly, whichever one is closest to you that you haven’t been to yet. But if you’re asking me to pick a starter park, I send people to Acadia in Maine (small, coastal, dog-friendly, easy to drive) or the Grand Canyon South Rim in winter (half the crowds, no timed entry from December through February, and unforgettable). Save Yellowstone and Zion for when you’re ready to plan reservations months out.

For several of the big ones, yes. Arches, Glacier (Going-to-the-Sun), Rocky Mountain, Yosemite (peak weekends), Mount Rainier, and Shenandoah all use some version of timed entry or vehicle reservations in 2026. I keep the current list updated in my 2026 fees & reservations guide, including the exact windows and how to actually score a slot.

Most parks are $20–$35 per vehicle for a 7-day pass. If you’re hitting more than three in a year, the America the Beautiful annual pass at $80 pays for itself fast — I buy mine in January and don’t think about entrance fees again. Camping inside the park runs $20–$40 a night; gateway-town hotels are usually where the budget gets eaten alive.

Yes, if you pick the right park and the right strategy. Zion, Badlands, Acadia, and Bryce all work as solid one-day visits if you’re up at sunrise and willing to skip the visitor center movie. Yellowstone and Glacier really don’t, give those at least three days. I’ve written one-day itineraries for the parks that handle a quick visit well, linked above.

My honest answer: shoulder season, late September through early November, and mid-April through mid-May. You get reasonable weather, half the crowds of July, no reservation systems in most parks, and shockingly good wildlife activity. Winter is my favorite at the Grand Canyon, Bryce, and Yellowstone’s north range (Lamar Valley). Summer is the worst time at almost every famous park.

YES, but their access varies wildly by park, which trips a lot of people up. Most national parks allow dogs in developed areas (campgrounds, parking lots, paved paths) but ban them from trails and backcountry. A handful are genuinely dog-friendly: Acadia, Shenandoah, and Cuyahoga Valley let leashed dogs on most trails. Others, like Yellowstone and Zion, technically allow dogs but barely let them do anything. Always check the specific park’s pet rules before you go, keep your dog leashed (it’s required, and it protects wildlife), and never leave them in a hot car. I break down which parks actually welcome dogs in my dog-friendly travel guides.

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old water, older trees, and a sky doing its best w old water, older trees, and a sky doing its best work right before dark. some places make you feel like a guest in something ancient. this is one. 🌅

📍 Wakulla Springs, FL
Lamar Valley is where Yellowstone stops being a po Lamar Valley is where Yellowstone stops being a postcard and starts being a nature docuseries. Bison traffic jams, wolves you have to squint for, elk drama at dawn. 🐺

🚫 Please make sure to keep your distance. All photos were taken with a zoom lens. 

📍✨Save this for your trip to Yellowstone so you can come back and brag about how many animals you got to see 😉
Utah has a mountain where you’re allowed to just…d Utah has a mountain where you’re allowed to just…dig for your own topaz. And somehow nobody talks about it.

Topaz Mountain is exactly what it sounds like, a stretch of high desert where you show up, pick a spot in the rhyolite, and crack rock until little crystals fall out. No guide, no fee, no gift shop. Just you, a hammer, and the slowly dawning realization that you’ve become a person who collects rocks on purpose.

Came home dusty, sunburned, and weirdly thrilled about a handful of crystals. 

10/10, would dilly-dally through the desert again.

📍 Save this for your Utah list 🔨💎✨
Bryce Canyon is the rare national park you can gen Bryce Canyon is the rare national park you can genuinely do a lot in one day! I only had 1 day at Bryce and here’s what I did…

Sunrise at Sunrise Point, the Queen’s Garden → Navajo loop down into the hoodoos, the overlooks at midday, and Silent City glowing at golden hour. That’s the whole day, no wasted miles.

📍 Save it for your trip to Utah 🏜️
(Fair warning: it’s the kind of place that ruins you a little for regular scenery 😉)
spent a summer on the Maine coast and now every ot spent a summer on the Maine coast and now every other place has to file a complaint 🌊🌲🦞⛵️
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