• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Unexplored Camping

Camping News & Reviews

  • Home

those

Boulder Adventure Lodge Offers Discounted Lodging for Those in Need

Asa Firestone, the Co-Owner and Operator of Boulder’s Adventure Lodge, released a statement via Facebook on March 21st:

“To the A-Lodge Family, Followers, and our Boulder Community:

Along with many other locally owned Boulder hotels and restaurants, we have been forced to close our doors to guests and layoff the entirety of our staff as of this Sunday 3/22. However, we are encouraged by the serious and quick action that our Boulder Community has taken to effectively respond to the spread of Covid-19. We are optimistic that because of this response, many lives will be saved and we will be able to re-open our doors for normal hotel operations soon.

In an effort to keep some lights on and provide some work opportunities for our furloughed staff, starting immediately, we are offering our rooms for weekly rentals with reduced services at a greatly discounted rate. None of our rooms have shared ventilation or shared entry ways and our lobby will stay closed. If you can’t quarantine where you are, A-Lodge Boulder is not a bad option.

Our room offerings consist of:

Single Queen Rooms with fridge and microwave – $ 275/week
Double Queen Rooms with fridge, microwave and stovetop – $ 345/week
Bunk Queen Suite (queen bed and bunk bed) – $ 345/week
Adventure Queen with full kitchen – $ 375/week
Two Bedroom Suite with full kitchen – $ 375/week
Three Bedroom Cabin with full kitchen – $ 475/week

If you or someone else that you know is in need of a temporary place to social distance, reach out to us directly with some info on yourself and your situation at info@a-lodge.com to set up an interview and to tour the facility.

Thanks again to our Boulder community and all of you who support a locally owned, small business. We will be assessing the situation everyday and if necessary we are open to utilizing the facility for whatever the situation calls for. Thanks for following us. More to come soon. Stay strong! We will get through this together.

With love and adventure,
– Asa, Kris, & the A-Lodge Family”


[Read More …]

Be sure to visit UnexploredPodcast.com and connect with us on social below.

Facebook – Instagram – Twitter – Pinterest – Youtube

Hear the Unexplored Podcast at any of the below…

Apple – Google – Deezer – Stitcher – Spotify – LibSyn

Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

You’ve Never Seen Sunrises Like Those at Death Valley

62 Parks Traveler started with a simple goal: to visit every U.S. national park in one year. Avid backpacker and public-lands nerd Emily Pennington saved up, built out a tiny van to travel and live in, and hit the road. The parks as we know them are rapidly changing, and she wanted to see them before it’s too late.


Both times I’ve been to Death Valley, California, I’ve gotten lost. Big-time. As the largest national park in the lower 48 (by over a million acres), three-million-acre-plus Death Valley can be tricky to navigate. The scale of the bumpy washes and far-flung barren peaks is dizzying.

On my first trip there, in 2017, a friend and I plotted a cross-country course through what looked like five flat miles of desert gravel on the way to a striking breccia canyon. The way in was glorious, with narrow squeezes between rock walls, ocher-colored cliffs, and Class 3 scrambles up dryfalls. Plus, we had the place to ourselves. The way out? Not so much. In our naive attempt to haul ass back to Lulu the Adventure Prius, we overshot a series of huge red-rock berms. We couldn’t find the car. Shamefully, we hitchhiked back to the ranger station to get some help.

I’m happy to report that on this year’s trip to Death Valley, I fared better—though I still got lost.

B7lvXkHhGhW

I entered the park on the eastern side and rose early to greet the sunrise from Zabriskie Point with about 50 other camera-toting tourists. Watching as the nearest star sprinkled rouge fairy dust all over the colorful badlands, I began to see what the fuss was about. The brilliant pink alpenglow bursting across the tip of Telescope Peak is certainly worth waking up for.

As the day progressed, my partner, Brian, and I wanted to go for a hike, and we noticed a steep, serpentine path cut right along the ridgeline of a nearby rust-tinted mountain range. The trail sign said “Red Cathedral—2.3 miles.” It looked perfect.

Up we went, teetering on the edge of an imposing, crumbling mountain face. The trail got sketchier as we hiked, often stretching the definition of the word trail, but there were people ahead of us, so how bad could it be? By the time we got to the end, my heart was pounding from the exposure. I wanted to loop down to Golden Canyon and locate a real trail, and Brian agreed.

We followed the most obvious wash down, skidding through loose scree on our butts when the slope was too steep to walk. “This is kind of fun!” Brian shouted as we scampered down the rocks as quickly as we could manage.

Finally, we could see Badwater Road. It was only a quarter of a mile away, according to my GPS. “We’re gonna make it, thank God,” I mumbled to myself as I edged toward the end of the wash, only to be greeted by a 500-foot-high rock face. “Shit,” I yelped. “We’re cliffed out.” So we did what any reasonable person would do. We licked our ego wounds and trudged back up the barren wash, backtracking along the sketchy trail toward the car.

Some national parks hold your hand while you amble through verdant meadows and down peaceful woodland trails, taking selfies and feeling at one with the universe. Death Valley is not that park, nor does it want to be. It’s a desert wonderland, but one that lets you explore, and fail, at your own risk.

62 Parks Traveler Death Valley Info

Size: 3,373,063 acres

Location: Central California and western Nevada, 130 miles west of Las Vegas, straddling the California-Nevada border

Created In: 1933 (national monument), 1994 (national park)

Best For: Hiking, scrambling, scenic drives, and car camping

When to Go: In the spring (55 to 100 degrees), fall (48 to 107 degrees), or winter (39 to 74 degrees). Avoid the summer months, when temperatures can soar to well over 120 degrees.

Where to Stay: Furnace Creek Campground is centrally located and one of the few in Death Valley that offers some privacy between sites, in the form of small shrubs and mesquite trees. Amenities include flush toilets, picnic tables, fire pits and grills, and full hookups for RVs. Accessible sites are available as well.

Mini Adventure: Visit the Badwater Basin salt flats. At 282 feet below sea level, this unusual geological wonder is the lowest point in North America. Located 19 miles from Furnace Creek, there’s a great easy hike that’s suitable for those with strollers or wheelchairs. Simply head off the wooden boardwalk and onto the desert floor, and explore for as long as you’d like, taking in the magnificent views of Telescope Peak and the Panamint Mountains.

Mega Adventure: Tour the park’s colorful badlands on the Golden Canyon, Gower Gulch, and Badlands Loop. This eight-mile circuit gets hikers up close and personal with some of Death Valley’s most striking rock formations.

Worth a Detour: The Amargosa Opera House in Death Valley Junction is just a 30-minute drive from Furnace Creek. It features the life’s work of renaissance woman Marta Becket, who painted the entire interior of the venue by hand. Visit on a Saturday evening to catch a live performance in the stunning antique theater, or drop by in the afternoon for a tasty bite at the adjoining café.

[Read More …]

Be sure to visit UnexploredPodcast.com and connect with us on social below.

Facebook – Instagram – Twitter – Pinterest – Youtube

Hear the Unexplored Podcast at any of the below…

Apple – Google – Deezer – Stitcher – Spotify – LibSyn

Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Acknowledge what is here in Wisconsin and help maintain those natural resources and opportunities 


Wisconsin is known as a destination location to gather numerous wild things, whether it be flora or fauna.  Sometimes so designated by ranking; other times simply by numbers and enthusiasm with which people come here to spear lake sturgeon, shoot deer, flush ruffed grouse, train dogs, view prairie chickens and enjoy the autumn scenery.

All too often some take these resources for granted; or worse, believe it to be theirs alone.

But there’s more to do than admire and walk away. We must inform the biologists and politicians that we mostly like what we have. Thank them, too, or offer suggestions for minor changes.

Keep in mind, too, that seasons, bag limits and possession limits are set using scientific data, as well as social and tourist data, with science usually being front and center, carrying most weight.

We appreciate other states making accommodations for nonresidents and those guys should appreciate Wisconsin doing the same.

Because we lead or share the lead in the nation in many outdoors recreation categories, it is important to not short-change funding and protection for Wisconsin’s outdoors.

Let’s keep Wisconsin Wisconsin.

Categories: Wisconsin – Jerry Davis
Tags: Jerry Davis, Wisconsin Outdoor News

Be sure to visit UnexploredPodcast.com and connect with us on social below.

Facebook – Instagram – Twitter – Pinterest – Youtube

Hear the Unexplored Podcast at any of the below…

Apple – Google – Deezer – Stitcher – Spotify – LibSyn

Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Primary Sidebar

YETI Rambler 14 oz Stainless Steel Vacuum Insulated Mug with Lid CLICK IMAGE TO BUY NOW!

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • January 2021
    • December 2020
    • November 2020
    • October 2020
    • September 2020
    • August 2020
    • July 2020
    • June 2020
    • May 2020
    • April 2020
    • March 2020
    • February 2020
    • January 2020
    • December 2019
    • November 2019
    • October 2019
    • September 2019

    © Copyright 2019 · Unexplored Camping · All Rights Reserved

    Privacy Policy · Terms of Service