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  • Summer’s intense heat is changing the National Park Service’s approach to entry rules at this otherworldly Utah “Mighty Five” national park, opening up some last-minute late-summer travel opportunities for canyon country lovers.
  • Where to go for gravity-defying rock formations, vast and colorful canyons, and surprising water features.
  • Notes of cherry, espresso, and lavender—artisanal chocolate is taking Utah by storm.
  • Some national forests are jaw-dropping and mistakenly overlooked.
  • The Department of Interior has announced that it plans to restrict public access to the majority of the country’s national park sites if Congress doesn’t reach a deal by the September 30 deadline.
  • Wheelchair user, disabled-travel advocate, and blogger Cory Lee shares his favorite accessible trails in national parks.
  • The new Outdoor Collection by Marriott Bonvoy includes boutique lodgings near national parks like Grand Canyon and Great Smoky Mountains. Marriott plans to expand it with more cabins, yurts, domes, and lodges in wilderness escapes.
  • This fall, Acadia National Park plans to test a new permit system to cut down on traffic and overcrowding.
  • Ten countries, 10 national parks: Now’s the time to disappear off the grid and lose yourself in the great outdoors.
  • If you’ve visited any of these parks, you may not have known you were also visiting one of the country’s UNESCO-designated spots.
  • Think of National Plan for Vacation Day as an antidote to stress and anxiety.
  • The NPS recently announced changes that will impact a total of 117 national parks—among them Yosemite, Yellowstone, and the Grand Canyon.
  • Janpath Rd, Rajpath Area, Central Secretariat, New Delhi, Delhi 110011, India
    What began as an exhibit of Indian art in London in 1947 grew to become this New Delhi museum, now one of the largest in India. The pieces in the permanent collection (which stretches to some 200,000 items) span the globe—don’t miss the section on pre-Colombian art from the region that spans Central and South America—but the museum’s main focus is on representing thousands of years of Indian art and culture. The galleries showcase a wide array of topics, from coins, armor, and textiles to miniature painting, musical instruments, sacred texts, and tribal artifacts. Start at archaeology and work your way through.
  • Kildare St, Dublin 2, Ireland
    The National Museum of Ireland is free to enter and is spread across four sites in Dublin, covering archaeology, decorative arts and history, country life, and natural history. The archaeology museum is in an imposing building of columns, vaulted ceilings, and marble staircases situated on Kildare Street. It traces Ireland’s history from prehistoric times through the Roman, Viking, and medieval periods. The exhibitions are well set out and clearly labelled. The section on Ireland’s prehistoric gold, including exquisitely-wrought jewellery from the bronze and iron ages, is particularly interesting. But the most mind-blowing exhibition is called Kingship and Sacrifice, and displays findings related to the ritual killing of presumed royals during the iron age. As part of what are thought to be sovereignty and kingship rituals, people were sacrificed - sometimes brutally - and their bodies tossed into peat bogs (which often marked the boundaries between kingdoms). The anaerobic conditions of the bogs preserved the bodies, some of which are on display. Even after thousands of years you can still make out facial expressions, and in one case, hair! The museum also hosts important religious icons and relics from medieval Christianity, for example the twelfth century Cross of Cong - said once to have contained a fragment of the true cross. If you are at all interested in ancient history, set aside a good couple of hours and explore the museum thoroughly. It’s well worth it!
  • Schelpstraat 42, Oranjestad, Aruba
    Located in a former mansion, this interactive museum is full of ancient artifacts. Culled from three distinct periods of indigenous history, the collection includes more than 10,000 pieces from Pre-Ceramic (2500 B.C.E.–1000 C.E.), Ceramic (900–1515), and History Cultural (1515–1880) times. Visitors will find shell and stone tools, decorative items, and food vessels, along with vestiges of Aruba’s gold rush. Of particular note is a limestone family burial cave, which, at 4,000 years old, is one of the most ancient pieces in the museum. With its Dutch Colonial architectural details, the building itself is also worth admiring. Note: The museum is closed on Mondays.