Visit Activities
Showing 33 visit activities logged during our motorhome cross-country adventures.
Brother and family
Friends
Brother and family
Friends
Old friends
Charlevoix Casino
Casino with 950 slot machines and 24 tables, including Texas hold-em, blackjack, roulette, and minibaccarat. Visitors must be 18 years or older.
Dufresne Regional Park
Small regional park located on the outskirts of Val David. There are more than 500 rated climbing routes to attract climbers of all skill levels. The park also has 15 km of hiking trails
Mont-Tremblant Station
Pedestrian village at the base of Mont-Tremblant. One can either stroll along the small (and steep) lanes past the numerous shops, restaurants, and cafes, or take the free gondola to the upper part of the village.
Brother and family
Sebastopol Farmer’s Market
Delicious fresh regional food, live music, and dancing held every Sunday, from April to mid-December, in the downtown plaza
Brother's Family
Disovery Park
Seattle’s largest park. Its 534 acres include two miles of protected tidal beaches, active sand dunes, dramatic sea cliffs, meadows and forests, a lighthouse, and 11 miles of trails.
Ahwahnee Hotel
Spend evenings in the warm and cozy living room of the Ahwahnee Hotel reading and playing cards
Fremont Farmers Market
European-Style street market with gourmet food trucks and vendors selling antiques, collectibles, bygones, retro, vintage, original fashion, tools, deluxe junk and estate sale treasures. It is held every Sunday year-round
Sebastopol Farmers Market
Delicious fresh regional food, live music, and dancing held every Sunday, from April to mid-December, in the downtown plaza
Ahwahnee Great Lounge
Spend evenings in the warm and cozy living room of the Ahwahnee Hotel reading and playing cards
Lazy Daze Factory
Place with Lazy Daze motorhomes are manufactured and sold
San Diego Zoo
World famous zoo,located in the northern part of Balboa Park. The Zoo is home to more than 4,000 rare and endangered animals representing more than 800 species in a beautifully landscaped setting that replicates their natural habitats.
Monkey Feeding
Spontaneous stop along the way to Sukhothai at Khao No-Khao Kaeo, a Wat at the foot of a limestone mountain where monkeys like to hang out.
Hall of Opium Museum (Golden Triangle)
Aiming to educate people about opium, this museum portrays every angle of the story, starting from the history of the Golden Triangle, the origin of opium, the opium war, opium warlords, drug smugglers, opium effects, the battle against opium and poppy growing, to rehabilitation of living conditions of the people who live in the central of the Golden Triangle, the former worldwide infamous drug trading zone.
Karen Long Neck Tribe
Village of Mae Salong, where a tribe of Karen Long Neck people now live after fleeing from Burma. The Karen long neck women begin wearing rings when they are about four or five years old. Every year afterwards until their 21st birthday, a ring is added, eventually reaching as much as 25 pounds.
Elephant Kingdom
Fun day washing elephants in a river, feeding them, and then mounting them for a ride!
Desert Christ Park
35-acre property on a hill above Yucca Valley with 40 bright-white sculptures portraying the life and teachings of Christ
Noah Purifoy Desert Art Museum
Open-air desert museum featuring an offbeat collection of found folk-art assemblages.
Giant Rock
Large freestanding boulder in the Mojave Desert near Landers, California. The boulder covers 5,800 square feet of ground and is seven stories high
Hofskirkja
Last of the old churches of Iceland to be built in the traditional turf style.
Puffin colony
Area on a grassy hill where 10,000 pairs of puffins nest every year between April and August.
1880s sheepfold
In early summer, the farmers let their sheep graze in the highland pastures north and east of Myvatn. In autumn they would gather the sheep again and drive them into the main compartment (double row of lava stone) of this sheepfold. Every sheep is marked by its owner’s earmark enabling him to identify it and move it into his individual compartment of the sheepfold.
Stykkishólmskirkja
A futuristic church with a sweeping bell tower that looks like a whale vertebra, or some say, a spaceship. It was a far cry from the tiny sod-roofed church we had visited what seemed like a month ago. The interior of Stykkishólmskirkja features hundreds of suspended lights and a painting of the Madonna and child floating in the night sky. Like all Lutheran churches it is much simpler and less ornate than Catholic churches.
Sea Ranch Chapel
Tiny non-denominational sanctuary for prayer, meditation, and spiritual renewal with a unique architectural design. It was designed by James T. Hubbell’s, who is known for his ability to blend art, architecture, and nature in his work,
Ucluelet Aquarium
Small catch-and-release aquarium. All of the specimens in the exhibits are collected from nearby Barkley Sound and Clayoquot Sound, and are seasonally released back into the ocean. Despite its smallness, there were a lot of interesting animals on display: rockfish, crabs, bivalves, feather duster worms, bay pipefish, sea anemones, sea pen, and many more.
Manzanar Memorial
Quick stop on our drive down 395 towards Death Valley to reflect and pay tribute to the thousands of Japanese citizens who were interred during World War II. The strikingly white, obelisk memorial stands at the far edge of the camp before the dramatic backdrop of the Sierra.
Ocean Park
Ocean Park is a beautiful welcome to Oak Bluffs as you exit the ferry. Ocean Park is a 7 acre grassy space with a large white gazebo which serves as a bandstand. Plenty of geese for the kids to chase as well
