Yellowstone National Park. Mena flashes on the wireless**.
Travel is life, and that's what they do. Matt Smith and his wife, Karen, of Seattle, who have been to 63 national parks and were involved in plane crashes, posted a photo of one of their favorite national parks on social media.
The New York Post reported that the Smiths, an outdoor travelogue writer, posted their trip to the United States on Instagram, sharing their amazing journeys with netizens, including the famous Grand Canyon and California's Death Valley.
In this film, a smiling Smith divides their travels in the United States into three categories: the least appreciated, the most exciting, and the most amazing.
This beautiful list begins with the announcement of the Olympic National Park, which has been voted the "most diverse" park. The movie is set on Karen's walk in a historic place in Washington state.
In Death Valley, California's famous "paradisiacal paradise," Matt and Karen show us some of the most shocking views of this hot desert.
Montana's expansive Glacier National Park was voted "the most fascinating fitness trail" along with Washington's beautiful Mount Reyna National Park.
In this movie, in the ancient Yellowstone National Park, there is a buffalo walking on the road and a lone wolf roaming in the snowfield; The nation's national park is home to the Smith family's "best place to see in the wild."
Awarded in Bryce Valley, Utah, USA"The most unique"and another iconic attraction in the state, Zion National Park, won the award"The most fascinating"Awards.
It is followed by Grand Canyon National Park, known as the "most feared" and Bardes Islands National Park, the land of Dakota**, which is considered "the place where will and will are most needed". The film ends in Parkton, Wyoming, and the couple praises it"Impeccable"。
Death Valley in California. Marisa Dugo, Municipality of Lun Liberation.
Matt and Karen have traveled to almost every corner of the United States, but they can hardly tell the world about this particular experience. The couple survived a plane crash in Lake Clarke, Alaska, in 2011.
The Seattle Times reported that the two men were driving Piper N**ajo and collided with a seaplane in the same direction at an altitude of about 2,300 feet from the park. Eventually, with Matt and Karen unscathed, both landed unharmed.