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National Park Guide

Browse live National Park webcams, weather, maps, hiking notes, lodging, camping, and current park conditions from U.S. national parks.

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Lake Clark National Park

Lake Clark National Park and Preserve protects about 4 million acres of southwest Alaska where volcanoes, turquoise lakes, glaciers, coast, tundra, salmon streams, and bear habitat meet in one enormous wilderness. Despite its size, it remains one of the least visited national parks, with 19,778 recreation visits recorded in 2025. The park has no road access from the highway system, so most visits begin with an air taxi, boat, or guided trip into Port Alsworth, the coast, or a backcountry landing area.

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Mesa Verde National Park

Mesa Verde National Park protects about 52,485 acres in southwestern Colorado near the Four Corners region, where high mesas and deep canyons hold one of the most important archeological landscapes in the United States. The park recorded 463,130 recreation visits in 2025, making it far busier than the remote Alaska parks but still quieter than many western national parks. Visitors come for cliff dwellings, mesa-top sites, canyon overlooks, hiking trails, ranger-led tours, and the chance to understand a landscape shaped by generations of Ancestral Pueblo people.

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National Park of American Samoa

The National Park of American Samoa protects tropical rainforest, coral reefs, volcanic mountains, beaches, and Samoan cultural landscapes across parts of Tutuila, Ofu, and Ta'u in the South Pacific. NPS describes the park as including about 9,500 land acres and 4,000 marine acres, mostly coral reefs, while the official national park acreage commonly listed for ranking purposes is 8,256.67 acres. The park recorded 43,258 recreation visits in 2025, making it one of the least visited national parks despite its rare ecosystems and island setting.

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Pinnacles National Park

Pinnacles National Park protects about 26,685 acres of volcanic spires, talus caves, chaparral, oak woodlands, canyons, and California condor habitat in central California. The park recorded 348,030 recreation visits in 2025, making it a smaller and more rugged alternative to California's better-known mountain and coastal parks. Visitors come for steep hiking routes, spring wildflowers, cave passages, rock formations, birding, climbing, and the chance to see condors soaring over the High Peaks.

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