Rosita's Guidebook

Rosita
Rosita's Guidebook

Sightseeing

xplore Sequoia & Kings Canyon Explore Page Banner Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks: a recreational wonderland ready to explore. Explore Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks create a recreational wonderland covered by ancient forests, soaring domes, granite canyons, and rivers that roar or ripple, depending on the season. And all of it, kissed by some of the Sierra Nevada's most consistently sunny weather. These two parks are separate and adjacent, but administered as one by the National Parks Service. With Giant Sequoia National Monument right next door, this is a massive, million-acre-plus Sierra playground, filled with points of amazement to explore and engage. Sequoia National Park is named for earth's largest living things - Sequoiadendron giganteum, or giant sequoias. Their massive, cinnamon-hued trunks and stout limbs soar skyward only here, on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada range, between 5,000 and 8,200 feet. (Taller and more slender, coast redwoods grow only on a narrow strip along the Pacific Coast.)
18 當地人推薦
塞阿奎亞和國王峽谷國家公園
47050 Generals Hwy
18 當地人推薦
xplore Sequoia & Kings Canyon Explore Page Banner Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks: a recreational wonderland ready to explore. Explore Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks create a recreational wonderland covered by ancient forests, soaring domes, granite canyons, and rivers that roar or ripple, depending on the season. And all of it, kissed by some of the Sierra Nevada's most consistently sunny weather. These two parks are separate and adjacent, but administered as one by the National Parks Service. With Giant Sequoia National Monument right next door, this is a massive, million-acre-plus Sierra playground, filled with points of amazement to explore and engage. Sequoia National Park is named for earth's largest living things - Sequoiadendron giganteum, or giant sequoias. Their massive, cinnamon-hued trunks and stout limbs soar skyward only here, on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada range, between 5,000 and 8,200 feet. (Taller and more slender, coast redwoods grow only on a narrow strip along the Pacific Coast.)