9

Catoctin Mountain Park: A user's guide

This Maryland park houses Camp David, the famous presidential retreat, but you're more likely to see whitetail deer and black bears than a president.



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Franconia Notch State Park: A user's guide

This New Hampshire gem is a four-season recreational hub with hiking in the summer and snow skiing in the winter. (Bonus: It's easy to get to, thanks to access



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Death Valley National Park: A user's guide

Measuring well over 5,000 square miles, Death Valley National Park is the largest national park in the Lower 48. Of course, most people know it for its other su



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Olympic National Park: A user's guide

Sitting on the rain-soak Olympic Peninsula in northwest Washington, Olympic National Park is perhaps most known for its expansive temperate rain forest. However



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Grand Teton National Park: A user's guide

There's a reason why more than 4 million people visit this Wyoming wonder annually. (Don't worry: there's enough nature for everyone to enjoy at this neighbor t



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Central Park in New York: A user's guide

This famous urban greenspace is where the locals go to shrug off big city living and where the tourists go to see what all the fuss is about.



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Mount Mitchell State Park: A user's guide

Mount Mitchell State Park, about 35 miles northeast of Asheville, North Carolina, is a place of superlatives. The namesake peak is the tallest east of the Missi



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Explore America's Parks (Page 2)

More of MNN's user guides for some of the best national, state and local parks in the United States. Explore America's parks with this series.



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Explore America's Parks

This is part of Explore America's Parks, a series of user's guides to national, state and local park systems across the United States. We'll be adding new parks



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Mount Rainier National Park: A user's guide

Visible from Puget Sound to the west, Mount Rainer looms above the Cascade Range at 14,410 feet above sea level. This peak of fire and ice — an active volcano



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Gulf Islands National Seashore: A user's guide

Gulf Islands National Seashore, the country’s largest national seashore, includes six barrier islands stretched out for 160 miles from Santa Rosa Island, Flor



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Shenandoah National Park: A user's guide

Shenandoah National Park may be the world’s most beautiful highway right-of-way. This park in central Virginia stretches for 105 miles along the Blue Ridge Mo



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

National Park of American Samoa: A user's guide

The National Park of American Samoa isn’t the sort of place you visit on your way to some other destination. You have to really want to be here. It’s a 5 ½



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Great Basin National Park: A user's guide

There is more to Nevada than desert, hot nightclubs and garish, neon temples of gambling. Great Basin National Park, about 285 miles north of the Las Vegas Stri



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Gateway National Recreation Area: A user's guide

This expansive park offers a peek at the wilder side of New York and New Jersey — from the plush woodlands, hundreds of animal species and even a nude beach.



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Theodore Roosevelt National Park: A user's guide

You won’t find a home where the buffalo roam across this section of the Great Plains, but you will find 126 campsites at Theodore Roosevelt National Park. You



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Kings Canyon National Park: A user's guide

Towering granite walls, picturesque valleys carved by glaciers, jaw-dropping giant trees, waterfalls. It sounds like Yosemite National Park. Kings Canyon Nation



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Backbone State Park: A user's guide

Rustic buildings scattered across this Iowa state park make the trails all the more worth forging.



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Stephen C. Foster State Park: A user's guide

Stephen C. Foster State Park gives access to the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, likely the wildest 402,000 acres in the Southeast.



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

William B. Umstead State Park: A user's guide

Wedged between Raleigh, Durham and Research Triangle Park is more than eight square miles of woods dotted with lakes and laced with streams and trails. William



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Burton Island State Park: A user's guide

You don’t have to travel to the Caribbean for a laid-back island experience. Burton Island State Park in Vermont provides a getaway for swimming and sunbathin



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Carrizo Plain: Exploring 'the Serengeti of the West'

Carrizo Plain — hot and dry for much of the year — is a diverse, bountiful but fragile ecosystem.



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

Badlands National Park: A user's guide

This South Dakota park delivers a dose of rugged beauty, from the namesake rocks to a classic prairie teeming with wildlife.



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

A pandemic isn't the time to worry about being Employee of the Month

Why the last thing you should stress about while working from home during the coronavirus pandemic is productivity.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

9

Our food supply system is shaky, but it's not breaking, say experts

The U.S. food supply is experiencing problems, from milk to chicken to produce, but it's functioning and shoppers can get the food they need during COVID-19.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

9

What happens when humans aren't allowed to touch each other?

Without human touch, we lose one of our most effective ways to empathize with one another.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

9

COVID-19: Where do we go from here?

COVID-19 isn't just going to go away. Here's what we can expect next with testing, immunity and when flu and the coronavirus are both present.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

9

WHO says coronavirus 'immunity passports' are a bad idea

WHO says "immunity passports" certifying that people are immune to the coronavirus are premature since we don't know if they will work.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

9

Llama antibodies could help treat COVID-19

A llama antibody that fights infections could help humans in the fight against the coronavirus.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

9

Earth's ozone layer may still be in trouble

The hole over Antarctica is slowly healing, but research suggests the ozone layer is thinning at lower latitudes.




9

America's most sustainable communities

Three communities recognized as setting the "gold standard" for local-level sustainability planning named winners of the 2011 Siemens Sustainable Community Awar



  • Sustainable Business Practices

9

What you need to know about South Korea's seaweed farms

From many miles above, the seemingly neat and orderly seaweed "fields" resemble blocks of text from books.



  • Organic Farming & Gardening

9

It's a bad time to be a bee, but it doesn't have to be

2014 was a rough year for U.S. honeybees, according to a new federal survey. Here's how you can help out your local pollinators.



  • Organic Farming & Gardening

9

'The Voice' winner Sawyer Fredericks is an upstate NY farmer

16-year-old entertainer says he's excited to return to his family's 88-acre farm and 'take in the open space and nature around my home.'



  • Arts & Culture

9

World's oldest peach pits reveal juicy secrets

At more than 2.5 million years old, the peaches predate the arrival of humans to the region.



  • Research & Innovations

9

This 'headbanging' bee pollinates like a rock star

A new super slow-motion video reveals the unusual pollination strategy of Australia's blue-banded bee.



  • Research & Innovations

9

9 wooly facts about darling babydoll sheep

Babydoll Southdown sheep are tiny — and chock full of personality.




9

If you don't like bugs, you should love spiders

Spiders eat several hundred million tons of insects per year, a new study finds, a global feast rivaling the yearly meat intake of humans.




9

Seattle businesses are slipping on Amazon's 1.7 million free bananas

By giving away free bananas in Seattle, Amazon is disrupting local businesses.




9

10 of the country's best state and county fairs

These grand get-togethers take us back to America's farming roots. Demolition derbies, pig shows, rides and fried everything await.



  • Arts & Culture

9

Want a cider apple orchard? Here's what to plant

With a little help from a famous seventh-generation orchardist, I narrow down some of the best varieties to plant for a backyard orchard.



  • Organic Farming & Gardening

9

'Rebel' farmers launch second organic label

A new label will certify foods grown in soil and animal products from pastured animals and would rule out hydroponic and aquaponic techniques.




9

Americans use less water than they did in 1970

U.S. water usage is at a 45-year low, according to a new government report. But is that low enough?



  • Wilderness & Resources

9

There's glyphosate in our food system — so now what?

Traces of the weed killer glyphosate are increasingly being found in food, but the public is at a loss of how to process that information.




9

New Zealand's crazy avocado crime wave

This is the downside of trendy foods.



  • Organic Farming & Gardening

9

Just in time for Valentine's Day, a Tinder-style app ... for cows

A new app called Tudder promises to help lonely cows find their perfect match, Tinder-style.




9

Southwest may see 'megadrought' this century

A megadrought, which can last more than three decades, is increasingly likely in the region due to climate change.



  • Climate & Weather

9

Scientists warn the world is about to reach 'peak meat'

Scientists say we have 10 years to dramatically restructure the livestock industry.



  • Climate & Weather

9

​'The Real Dirt on America's Frontier Legends'

Jim Motavalli shares an excerpt from his just-released book, ​"The Real Dirt on America's Frontier Legends"



  • Arts & Culture

9

Museum goes 'Art-Less' to highlight the role of immigrants in our lives

The Davis Museum at Wellesley College will remove 120 pieces of art that were created or donated by immigrants.



  • Arts & Culture