Showing posts with label State Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label State Park. Show all posts
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Elephant Rock at Valley of Fire
Outgoing postcard US-3599773 to Hong Kong shows an arch in the shape of an elephant near the east entrance of the Valley of Fire State Park in Overton, Nevada. Parking is prohibited on the main road near the rock, but visitors can park at the east entrance parking lot and take a short 0.2 mile hiking trail to a vantage point. There are chances to see wildlife but watch out for lizards and snakes.
The card was sent on November 28, 2015 and has since expired,
Unrelated, USPS faces a forced postal rate deduction starting today on April 10, 2016. Mailing a 4"x6" postcard domestically will now cost 34¢ instead of 35¢; while an oversize one will incur the 1oz first class letter rate at 47¢ after a 2¢ reduction. The international postcard rate, same as that of a first class international letter up to 1oz, has decreased from USD 1.20 to USD 1.15.
Labels:
arch,
Elephant Rock,
expired postcard,
Hong Kong,
HyperGIS,
Nevada,
postage,
PostCrossing,
reduction,
rock,
State Park,
US-3599773,
USPS,
Valley of Fire
Thursday, January 7, 2016
Buffaloes, Custer State Park, Black Hills, South Dakota
Postcard US-3761486 to Germany is a vintage card showing Custer State Park, a state park and wildlife reserve in the Black Hills of southwestern South Dakota. On the back of the card, it reads: "Custer State Park is one of the largest State Parks in the U.S.A. It contains 128,000 acres of wonderful scenery, consisting of mountains, picturesque gorges, beautiful lakes and streams. 90,000 acres are under fence, and roaming unmolested within this enclosure are Buffalo, Elk, Deer, Big Horn Sheep, Rocky Mt. Goats and Antelope."
Wikipedia lists the park area as 71,000 acres. Founded in 1912 and named after Lt. Colonel George Armstrong Custer, the park has an annual buffalo roundup and auction in September, where buffaloes are rounded up, with surplus sold at auction so that the remaining number of animals can be sustained by the rangeland forage. However, those "buffaloes" are actually American Bison as shown on the card.
Labels:
1912,
bison,
Black Hills,
buffalo,
Custer State Park,
Germany,
postcard,
PostCrossing,
roundup,
sent,
South Dakota,
State Park,
US-3761486,
vintage
Saturday, June 6, 2015
Mount Tamalpais, California
Postcard US-1994530 from California shows Mount Tamalpais, located in Marin County, California with a 2,574-foot or 785-meter peak. The mountain bike is said to have been invented here. Located on the other side of the Golden Gate Bridge across San Francisco, it offers spectacular ocean views and city views of San Francisco from the top. Much of Mount Tamalpais is protected within public lands such as Mount Tamalpais State Park.
Today in History: The Chicago "L" commuter rail system began operation in 1892.
Labels:
California,
cityscape,
Marin County,
Mount Tamalpais,
mountain bike,
postcard,
PostCrossing,
received,
San Francisco,
State Park,
US-1994530
Location:
Mount Tamalpais, California 94941, USA
Friday, July 4, 2014
Battle Born
In this Independence Day on the 4th of July, CNN Interactive is showcasing a natural wonder in each of the 50 states. CNN's choice of amazing natural wonder in Nevada is the Valley of Fire State Park, USPS also issued a Nevada Statehood Forever Commemorative stamp on May 29, 2014, featuring a view in the Valley of Fire State Park, to celebrates the 150th anniversary of Nevada Statehood.
When President Abraham Lincoln needed another Republican state to help support his anti-slavery policies in Congress, people in Nevada answered the call and voted to join the Union, even the population in Nevada back then was not big enough to form a state. Nevada was admitted to the Union in 1864, during the Civil War. Hence the words “Battle Born” have appeared on the Nevada state flag since.
The postcard was made by VistaPrint with one of my photos taken on November 27, 2011.
#CNN50spots
Labels:
#CNN50spots,
4th of July,
Abraham Lincoln,
anniversary,
Battle Born,
Civil War,
flag,
Independence Day,
map,
Nevada,
president,
stamp,
state,
State Park,
statehood,
United States,
USPS,
Valley of Fire,
wonder
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Discover Nevada State Parks Day
As an official Nevada 150 event of the Silver State’s Sesquicentennial celebration, and in conjunction with National Get Outdoors Day, “Discover Nevada State Parks Day” offers visitors free day use admission and free fishing (no license required) at all of Nevada’s 23 State Parks on June 14, 2014.
I went to see the Old Mormon Fort in Las Vegas, a state historic park located next to the Las Vegas Natural History Museum. It was the first European settlement in Las Vegas, Nevada. One hundred fifty nine years ago, thirty missionaries arrived and started to build a 46-meter or 150-foot square adobe fort on June 14, 1855. Therefore, June 14th is remembered as Settlement Day, the day the first non-native permanent residents set foot in the Las Vegas valley. The Mormon outpost served as a way station for travelers. The first post office in Las Vegas was established on site in 1893.
The postcard, featuring art work by local artist Ali Tenney Boyer, was a gift from completing a survey after the visit.
Friday, May 23, 2014
Valley of Fire
Postcard US-1804465 to Germany shows a flaming sunset view at the Valley of Fire, the oldest and largest state park in Nevada located 55 miles from Las Vegas, dedicated in 1935. The Valley of Fire got its name from red sandstone formations, formed from great shifting sand dunes some 150 million years ago when dinosaurs were around. You can find areas of petrified wood and early Indian petroglyphs throughout the park. There is a diverse desert bio-community that features creosote bush, burro bush, and brittlebush; beaver tail and cholla cactus; springtime blooming plants such as desert marigold, indigo bush, and desert mallow; birds such as raven, house finch, sage sparrow, and roadrunner; lizard and snake; coyote, kit fox, spotted skunk, jackrabbit; and the desert tortoise.
The Valley of Fire was designated as a National Natural Landmark in 1968. The park is also marked as Nevada Historical Marker #150. A close-up view of an area in Fire Canyon, part of Valley of Fire, has made on to the Nevada Statehood Forever Commemorative stamp, to be issued by USPS in Las Vegas, NV on May 29, 2014, to celebrates the 150th anniversary of Nevada statehood. The oil-on-Masonite panel was painted by Nevada artist Ron Spears.
Labels:
1935,
1968,
artist,
desert,
Fire Canyon,
forever,
Germany,
National Natural Landmark,
Nevada,
Nevada Historical Marker,
red,
Ron Spears,
sandstone,
stamp,
State Park,
statehood,
tortoise,
USPS,
Valley of Fire
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Goblin Valley State Park in Utah
Postcard DE-3022284 from Germany shows Goblin Valley State Park in Utah, USA. It is noted for thousands of hoodoos and hoodoo rocks, known to locally as “goblins”, which are formations of mushroom-shaped rock pinnacles, some as high as several meters. Those distinct shaped rocks are results from an erosion-resistant layer on top of softer sandstone. The park is about 400 miles or 644 kilometers from Las Vegas.
Labels:
DE-3022284,
erosion,
Germany,
goblin,
Goblin Valley State Park,
hoodoo,
postcard,
PostCrossing,
received,
rock,
sandstone,
State Park,
Utah
Monday, August 12, 2013
Petroglyph Panel at the Newspaper Rock State Historical Monument
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Petroglyphs by Native Americans |
Newspaper Rock gained the "State Historical Monument" recognition in 1961. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places as Indian Creek State Park in 1976.
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