Thursday, April 16 | The Shedd Aquarium & Heading Home
One last morning in Chicago, one last adventure, and a long road home. It’s been an incredible trip.
After eight nights in Chicago, we gave ourselves full permission for the laziest of mornings. Coffee in bed, no rush, no agenda. Just two people savoring the last quiet hours in our 20th floor corner room with those magnificent views of Lake Michigan one final time. Some mornings are worth stretching out, and this was one of them.
Eventually, reality called. We packed up, said goodbye to what had been a truly spectacular home base at the Hilton Chicago, checked out, and stored our bags so we could squeeze in one last adventure before heading to the airport.
That adventure was the Shedd Aquarium — and what a way to close out the trip. Situated right on the Museum Campus alongside the Adler Planetarium and the Field Museum, the Shedd is one of the world’s premier aquariums, and it lived up to every bit of that reputation. We wandered through stunning exhibit after stunning exhibit — vibrant coral reef displays teeming with color, graceful sharks gliding through massive tanks, and the always mesmerizing beluga whales, who seemed just as curious about us as we were about them. So much more besides. It was a fantastic afternoon and a genuinely wonderful final chapter to an already unforgettable trip.
With the aquarium checked off and hearts full, we retrieved our bags and made the trek out to O’Hare for our evening flight home to San Antonio. Travel, as it sometimes does, had other plans. A couple of delays pushed our departure back, but we were fortunate enough to wait it out in the comfort of the Admiral’s Club — which made the wait considerably more bearable.
We finally touched down at 12:30 AM, and by the time we got home it was even later. Tired? Absolutely. Worth it? Without question.
Chicago 2026 is a wrap. What a trip it was. 🏙️❤️
Thank you for following along on our Chicago adventure! From the lakeshore to Wrigley Field, Pullman to Indiana Dunes, Millennium Park to the Grand Ballroom — this city gave us everything. Until the next road trip, Tezels out. 🚗✨
Day 7 | Wednesday, April 15 | Indiana Dunes National Park, Deep Dish & the Adler Planetarium
An overcast day, a national park adventure, Chicago Dogs, deep dish pizza, and a night under the stars. Day 7 had everything.
The weather wasn’t exactly cooperating as we picked up our rental car from National Car Rental and headed east toward Indiana Dunes National Park. But a few clouds were not going to stop us — and as it turned out, we had a secret weapon waiting for us at the park: a friend who works there and was kind enough to show us around.
He met us at West Beach and pointed us straight to the Dune Succession Trail — and what a recommendation it was. The trail takes you up and over the dunes, through a hauntingly beautiful grove of Jack Pines, and down to the beach on the shores of Lake Michigan. The Jack Pines are one of those unexpected highlights — gnarled, resilient trees that thrive in the harsh sandy environment, giving the landscape an almost otherworldly feel.
At the beach, the overcast skies dampened the view across Lake Michigan toward Chicago — but even on a grey day, standing on that shore with the dunes at your back and the vast lake stretching out in front of you is genuinely impressive. The dunes themselves are enormous, and the scale of the place surprises you.
From West Beach we made our way to the Bally Homestead, one of the historic structures within the park — unfortunately closed for restoration, but still worth a look from the outside. Next up was the Dunes Learning Center, a great stop for understanding the ecology and history of this remarkable landscape.
By this point we had worked up an appetite, and lunch did not disappoint. We drove into Chesterton for Chicago Dogs at The Original George’s Gyros Spot. If you’re in the area and you haven’t stopped here — fix that immediately. Classic, delicious, and exactly what you want after a morning on the dunes.
Fueled up and ready for more, we headed to the Century of Progress Architectural District — one of the more unusual corners of Indiana Dunes. This quirky collection of homes was originally built for the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair and later relocated to the lakeshore. It’s a fascinating little time capsule of modernist design hiding in plain sight among the dunes.
We wrapped up the park with a stop at the Indiana Dunes Visitor Center and a peaceful hike on the Great Marsh Trail — a nice contrast to the dune climbing earlier, winding through wetlands teeming with bird life and spring color.
Back in Chicago for the evening, we kicked things off the right way: deep dish pizza at Lou Malnati’s Pizzeria. If you visit Chicago and leave without eating at Lou Malnati’s, did you even go to Chicago? Rich, buttery crust, chunky tomato sauce on top, and enough cheese to make you question all your life choices — in the best possible way. Worth every bite.
We capped the evening at the Adler Planetarium, spending a Wednesday night exploring the universe. The Adler sits right on the Museum Campus peninsula jutting into Lake Michigan, and the views of the Chicago skyline from outside are spectacular. Inside, the shows and exhibits did not disappoint. There’s something wonderfully humbling about ending a full day of earthly adventures by contemplating the cosmos. 🌌
One more day to go. Tomorrow we visit the Shedd Aquarium before pointing the car south toward home in San Antonio. It’s hard to believe this trip is almost over.
Next up: Day 8 — Shedd Aquarium and the road home to San Antonio. Stay tuned!
A slow morning, a riverside stroll, and a quiet evening before the next adventure.
After the whirlwind of the Gala the night before, Day 6 called for something a little more relaxed. I was happy to oblige with a lazy morning — coffee, no agenda, just enjoying the view from our 20th floor corner room. Alicia even had a later start. Sometimes the best travel days start slowly.
By afternoon, Alicia finally had a break from the conference, and we made the most of it. We headed out together to walk the Chicago Riverwalk — and what a perfect way to spend an afternoon. The Riverwalk stretches along the south bank of the Chicago River through the heart of the city, and it’s one of those places that reminds you why Chicago is considered one of the great architectural cities of the world.
We strolled at a leisurely pace, taking in the canyon of buildings rising on either side of the river — a stunning mix of historic and contemporary architecture that you simply can’t appreciate the same way from street level. Bridges, towers, reflections on the water — it was a feast for the eyes at every turn. After days of Mark exploring solo, it was especially nice to share this one together.
The evening was quiet and intentional. With tomorrow marking the end of our Chicago stay and the beginning of the next leg of the trip — Indiana Dunes National Park — we kept things low-key, packed up, and got ready to move on. Eight nights at the Hilton Chicago have been wonderful, but the road (and the dunes) are calling.
Chicago, you’ve been incredible. 🏙️
Next up: Day 7 — Indiana Dunes National Park. Stay tuned!
Monday, April 13 | Millennium Park, Grant Park & the Gala
A perfect spring day along Michigan Avenue, and a glamorous evening to cap it all off.
With Alicia back in conference sessions, I headed out to spend the day exploring two of Chicago’s most iconic green spaces right along Michigan Avenue: Millennium Park and Grant Park. I couldn’t have asked for a better day for it — the spring weather was doing its thing, flowers were blooming, and the trees were just beginning to bud. Chicago in April can be unpredictable, but today it was showing off.
First stop, of course: Cloud Gate — the Bean. I know, I know — Alicia and I had already made the pilgrimage on Saturday morning. But honestly, it deserved a second visit. There’s something irresistible about that giant mirror-polished ellipse. I dare anyone to walk past it without stopping. The spring light hitting the skyline reflection was even more stunning than the first time.
From there I made my way over to Crown Fountain, one of those public art installations that’s hard to describe but impossible to ignore. Two 50-foot glass block towers flank a shallow reflecting pool, each displaying a rotating cast of Chicago residents’ faces. There’s something quietly captivating about watching the faces change — a reminder that this city is made of people, thousands of them, all with their own stories. I spent more time there than I expected.
The gardens throughout Millennium Park were absolutely beautiful — bursts of spring color everywhere, and the trees showing the first fresh green of the season. It’s the kind of scenery that makes you slow down and just take it in.
I then crossed over into Grant Park, which stretches right across Michigan Avenue from the Hilton Chicago — practically our front yard for the week. The flowers here were equally gorgeous. I wandered over to the John A. Logan Monument, a dramatic equestrian statue honoring the Union Civil War general and Illinois senator. It’s an impressive piece of sculpture, and it commands the park beautifully.
One of the unexpected highlights of the afternoon was simply paying attention to the architectural details of the park’s bridges. Chicago is famously a city of architecture, and even the park infrastructure reflects that — ornate stonework, decorative ironwork, and elegant design details that most people walk right past. I made a point not to.
And then — the evening. After a day on my feet, it was time to clean up and join Alicia for the Urgent Care Foundation Gala, held in the Hilton Chicago’s Grand Ballroom. I’ll be honest: I was not prepared for how spectacular that room is. Soaring ceilings, crystal chandeliers, ornate details at every turn — it’s the kind of ballroom that makes any event feel like a genuinely special occasion. The gala was a wonderful evening celebrating the work of the Urgent Care Foundation, and it was a perfect way to cap one of the best days of the trip.
Parks by day, Grand Ballroom by night. Not a bad Monday in Chicago. 🌷✨
Chicago’s iconic Cloud Gate sculpture mirrors the city skyline and flowering trees on a spring day, as visitors gather along the park’s stone terrace to take in the reflective landmark.
Next up: Day 6 — More Chicago adventures ahead. Stay tuned!
Where the Only Tropical Rainforest in the U.S. Meets the Work of Puerto Rican Artists
The Science and Conservation Trail at El Yunque National Forest is a short loop — about half a mile — that manages to deliver two entirely different kinds of experiences. A paved spur from the El Portal del El Yunque visitor center leads into the forest with interpretive signs explaining the ecology and ongoing recovery of the only tropical rainforest in the United States National Forest System. The loop itself adds a second dimension: works by Puerto Rican artists set directly into the forest — Brota el agua by Lena Galíndez, De Río a Río by Edra Soto, and La Madre de Yocahú by Daniel Lind-Ramos. It is a walk where science and art share the same canopy, and both are made richer for it.
Trail Facts
Distance: ~0.5 miles (loop)
Elevation Gain: Minimal — gentle grade throughout
Difficulty: Easy
Trail Type: Loop (paved path)
Typical Hiking Time: 20–30 minutes
Trailhead: El Portal del El Yunque Visitor Center, off PR-191, Río Grande, Puerto Rico
Accessibility: Paved surface throughout; accessible for most visitors
Pets: Allowed on leash
Entry Fee: Day-use vehicle fee required for entry to El Yunque National Forest
The Science and Conservation Trail is one of several walking paths accessible from the El Portal visitor center area. Its combination of interpretive science content and public art installations makes it unlike any other trail in the National Forest System — and the rainforest setting makes it unlike anything else in the continental United States.
Getting to the Trailhead
The trail begins at El Portal del El Yunque, the main visitor center for El Yunque National Forest. El Portal is located along Puerto Rico Highway 191 (PR-191) near the northern entrance to the forest, just outside the town of Río Grande on Puerto Rico’s northeastern coast. From San Juan, the drive takes approximately 45 minutes. El Portal is the recommended first stop — the center provides maps, orientation, and context for the forest before you head into the canopy.
El Yunque National Forest is located in the Sierra de Luquillo mountains in the northeastern corner of Puerto Rico, roughly 25 miles east of San Juan. The forest is the only tropical rainforest in the United States National Forest System, and El Portal sits at its edge — the gateway between the island’s coastal communities and one of the most biodiverse places in the country.
Hiking the Trail
From El Portal, a short paved spur path leads from the visitor center directly into the forest. This opening section is where the trail’s interpretive content lives — signs along the spur explain El Yunque’s ecology, the ongoing research being conducted in the forest, and the remarkable recovery underway since Hurricane Maria struck the island in September 2017. The spur is accessible, unhurried, and sets the scientific frame for everything that follows.
The loop itself begins where the spur enters the forest proper. Here the character of the walk shifts. The canopy closes in — sierra palms, tabonuco trees, and towering tree ferns rise on either side, draped in bromeliads and mosses. The air is heavy and cool, carrying the particular quality of a place that receives over 100 inches of rain per year in its upper elevations. And woven into this setting, at intervals along the loop, are works by Puerto Rican artists — installations placed directly in the forest, responding to this place and to the island’s history and culture. Brota el agua by Lena Galíndez meets you on the north segment, deep in the canopy. De Río a Río by Edra Soto anchors the westernmost point of the loop. And La Madre de Yocahú by Daniel Lind-Ramos — a monumental assemblage invoking the Taíno goddess Atabey — marks the southern return.
The loop is short enough to walk without hurry and rich enough to reward stopping. The combination of science interpretation on the spur and art on the loop gives the trail two distinct registers — both worth paying attention to. The return brings you back out to El Portal through the same forest edge, the transition from canopy to open sky feeling different on the way out than it did on the way in.
Trail Map
Highlights Along the Way
The Forest Itself
El Yunque is the most visited national forest in the United States — and the most biodiverse. The forest is home to more than 240 tree species, 50 of which are found nowhere else on Earth. The understory along the Science and Conservation Trail is dense with tree ferns, some belonging to genera that predate the dinosaurs. Epiphytes — bromeliads, orchids, mosses — coat nearly every surface. The sounds of the forest are as layered as the canopy: coquí frogs, birds, insects, and the constant movement of water.
Brota el agua — Lena Galíndez
Brota el agua — Water Springs Forth — by Lena Galíndez is installed on the northern segment of the loop, where the trail is deepest in the forest. The title speaks directly to El Yunque’s defining element: water is everywhere here, rising through the roots, dripping from the canopy, moving constantly through the soil. Galíndez’s work places that relationship between water and life at the center, inviting a kind of attention to the forest that pure ecology interpretation can only gesture toward.
De Río a Río — Edra Soto
Edra Soto is a Chicago-based artist born in Puerto Rico whose practice engages deeply with Puerto Rican identity, domestic space, and visual culture. De Río a Río — From River to River — is installed at the westernmost point of the loop, its title resonant in a place where water is everywhere: in the canopy, in the soil, running through the roots of every tree. Soto’s work in El Yunque places Puerto Rican artistic expression directly in the landscape that shaped the island’s culture, creating a conversation between the forest and the people who have always lived within and beside it.
La Madre de Yocahú — Daniel Lind-Ramos
Daniel Lind-Ramos is one of Puerto Rico’s most celebrated contemporary artists, known for large-scale assemblage sculptures that draw on Afro-Caribbean spiritual traditions, the island’s agricultural history, and the natural world. La Madre de Yocahú — The Mother of Yocahú — takes its name from Atabey, the Taíno goddess of fresh water and fertility, and mother of Yocahú, the supreme deity of the Taíno people. The title is a deliberate invocation of the forest’s deep human history: El Yunque takes its name from the Taíno word Yuké, and the mountain has been a sacred place for far longer than it has been a national forest. Lind-Ramos’s work on the southern return of the loop anchors the trail’s artistic program in the spiritual and cultural landscape that predates European contact — and that the forest has always carried.
The Recovery Story
The interpretive signs along the spur tell a story that is still unfolding. Hurricane Maria made landfall on Puerto Rico on September 20, 2017 as a Category 4 storm and stripped the canopy from nearly the entire forest. Scientists who had studied El Yunque for decades described it as unrecognizable. But the forest’s species have survived hurricanes for millennia — the trees here evolved to come back — and the regrowth in the years since has been extraordinary. Walking the trail today, it is possible to see both the evidence of the storm and the evidence of recovery in the same glance.
What Makes This Trail Special
The Science and Conservation Trail asks very little of your legs and a great deal of your attention. In half a mile, it moves through science, art, ecology, and culture without any of them feeling forced together. The forest is extraordinary on its own terms — there is nothing else like a tropical rainforest in the National Forest System, and the sensory experience of the canopy, the ferns, the heavy air, and the sound of coquís is genuinely unlike any other trail in this series. The three art installations add a layer that most trails never attempt: the idea that this landscape is also a cultural space, shaped by and belonging to the people of Puerto Rico. Galíndez listens to the water. Soto traces the rivers. Lind-Ramos reaches back to the Taíno. Together they make the loop something more than a walk — they make it a conversation with the island itself.
Tips for Visiting
Start at El Portal — the visitor center provides maps, restrooms, and orientation to the forest before you head out.
Come prepared for rain. El Yunque receives over 100 inches annually in its upper elevations — a light rain layer or poncho is worth carrying year-round.
Bring bug spray. The forest is prime mosquito territory, especially after rain.
Walk the spur slowly before the loop — the interpretive signs establish context that makes the art installations more meaningful.
Give each art installation time — Brota el agua, De Río a Río, and La Madre de Yocahú each reward a slow look. They are not roadside stops; they are part of the forest.
El Yunque and the National Forest System
El Yunque National Forest has been under federal protection longer than the National Forest System itself. The forest was first set aside by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1903 as the Luquillo Forest Reserve — one of the earliest federal forest reserves in the United States — and was formally incorporated into the National Forest System in 1935. It is administered by the USDA Forest Service and covers approximately 28,000 acres in the Sierra de Luquillo mountains. El Yunque is the only tropical rainforest in the National Forest System, and as such it serves as one of the most important sites for tropical ecology research in the country. The Luquillo Long-Term Ecological Research site — part of a network funded by the National Science Foundation — has produced decades of data on forest structure, species diversity, disturbance, and recovery, much of which informs the interpretive content along the Science and Conservation Trail.
The forest sits within the traditional territory of the Taíno people, whose presence in Puerto Rico predates European contact by more than a thousand years. The name Yuké — meaning white lands, likely a reference to the clouds that perpetually wrap the upper peaks — is the Taíno name for the mountain at the forest’s heart, and the source of the name El Yunque. The forest’s long history of human connection, from the Taíno through Spanish colonial administration to U.S. federal protection, is part of what makes El Portal and its trails a layered experience. The Science and Conservation Trail, with its combination of ecological research and Puerto Rican artistic expression, sits squarely in that tradition.
Tuesdays on the Trail Video
This trail guide pairs with our Tuesdays on the Trail video episode, where we walk the Science and Conservation Trail and explore the forest, the art, and the story of El Yunque’s recovery.
Final Thoughts
Half a mile is a short walk by almost any measure. But the Science and Conservation Trail at El Yunque earns its place in this series not through distance but through density — the density of the forest itself, the density of its ecology and history, and the particular richness of a trail that has the ambition to place art in a rainforest and trust that both will be better for it. El Yunque is the only tropical rainforest in the United States National Forest System. There is nothing else like it. If Puerto Rico is on your map, make sure the forest is too.
Sunday, April 12 | Pullman National Historical Park
A train ride to a town built by trains. NPS unit #249 is in the books!
With Alicia deep in conference sessions, I had the day to myself — and I had one destination in mind: Pullman National Historical Park. And fitting for a park steeped in railroad history, I got there the right way: aboard the Metra Electric train. Taking the train to Pullman isn’t just convenient — it’s part of the experience. Riding the rails into a neighborhood that was literally built around the railroad industry felt exactly right.
This was a new one for me — NPS unit #249! There’s always a special thrill walking into a national park site for the first time, and Pullman did not disappoint.
I started at the Administration Clock Tower Building, which houses the visitor center. The exhibits inside are genuinely excellent — telling the layered story of the Pullman company, the planned town George Pullman built for his workers in the 1880s, and the people who made it all run. A standout for me was the exhibit on the Pullman Porters — the predominantly Black workforce who staffed Pullman’s sleeping cars and played a pivotal role in the growth of the Black middle class and the labor movement in America. It’s a powerful and important story, and the park tells it well.
Just outside the visitor center, I explored the factory grounds — a mix of standing structures, atmospheric ruins, and interpretive railroad track installations that help you visualize the enormous industrial operation that once hummed here. At its peak, this was one of the largest manufacturing complexes in the country.
From there I walked over to Hotel Florence, currently undergoing restoration. Named after George Pullman’s daughter, the hotel was built to house Pullman’s distinguished guests and was the only place in the neighborhood where alcohol was served. Even mid-restoration, you can feel the elegance it once had.
I then wandered through the residential neighborhood — row after row of handsome red brick rowhouses that Pullman built for his workers. It’s remarkable how intact it all remains, and walking those streets gives you a real sense of what life in this planned utopian (and, critics would say, paternalistic) company town must have felt like.
Two more highlights rounded out the day: the striking Greenstone Church — built from serpentine stone and currently being lovingly restored — and the Pullman Firehouse, another beautifully preserved piece of this remarkable neighborhood.
Pullman is one of those places that surprises you. It’s not as well known as some of the marquee national parks, but the history here — of industry, labor, race, and the American working class — is as rich and relevant as anywhere I’ve visited. If you’re ever in Chicago, don’t skip it. 🚂
Next up: Day 5 — More Chicago adventures ahead. Stay tuned!
Friday, April 10 | Millennium Park & Wrigley Field
A cloudy morning, a giant silver bean, and a bucket-list baseball game. Day 2 had it all.
We woke up to a cloudy, damp Chicago morning — the kind of day that makes you want to linger over coffee a little longer. But with Alicia’s conference sessions starting at noon, we laced up and headed out to make the most of the morning. Our destination: Millennium Park.
The walk over was a perfect introduction to Chicago on foot. The city has an energy in the morning that’s hard to describe — locals heading to work, the lake peeking between buildings, the grand architecture framing every block. And then, there it was: Cloud Gate — or as everyone calls it, the Bean. No matter how many photos you’ve seen of it, nothing quite prepares you for standing underneath that massive mirror-polished sculpture and watching the city — and yourself — reflected in infinite curves above you. We spent more time there than we expected. Worth every minute.
With Alicia heading off to her first conference sessions, Mark had the afternoon all to himself. And he had exactly one item at the top of the list: Wrigley Field.
Bucket list. Checked. ✅
There’s something genuinely special about walking up to Wrigley for the first time. The famous red marquee sign, the ivy (still dormant in early April), the hand-operated scoreboard in center field, the rooftop bleachers on Waveland Avenue — it all feels like baseball the way baseball was meant to be experienced. The Cubs were hosting the Pittsburgh Pirates, and while the rain mercifully held off all afternoon, the Cubs couldn’t quite pull out the win. But honestly? On a day like this, the score almost didn’t matter.
Mark fueled up with the only acceptable ballpark meal: a Chicago Dog (mustard, relish, onion, tomato, pickle, sport peppers, and celery salt — no ketchup, never ketchup) and a bag of ballpark peanuts. Classic. Perfect. Chicago.
It was a great afternoon. One of those days where everything just clicks — the right place, the right food, the right vibe. Chicago keeps delivering. ⚾
We made it! After months of anticipation, the Tezels are officially in Chicago.
The adventure began with an afternoon flight — smooth, direct, and mercifully uneventful. The trip was prompted by Alicia’s attendance at the Urgent Care Association Conference, so while she’ll be deep in sessions over the coming days, Mark is along for the ride with a long list of Chicago sights to explore. Eight nights in the city. No complaints here.
Landing was easy enough, but Chicago had one classic welcome gift waiting for us: 5 o’clock traffic. Our Uber crawled through the city like everyone in Illinois had somewhere to be at the exact same moment (because they did). But patience prevailed, and we finally pulled up to our home for the next eight nights — the iconic Hilton Chicago.
Now, we’ve stayed in nice hotels before, but this room? This room is something. We scored a corner room on the 20th floor, and the views are genuinely jaw-dropping — sweeping vistas of Lake Michigan, the Museum Campus, and the lush green expanse of Grant Park stretching out below. We may have stood at that window a little longer than we’d like to admit.
After settling in and shaking off the travel fog, we laced up our shoes and headed out for an evening walk along the lakeshore. The air was crisp, the lake was vast and moody, and the skyline behind us glittered in the early evening light. It was exactly the kind of slow, unhurried arrival moment that makes travel feel worth it.
Back at the hotel, we capped the night with a light dinner and a well-earned glass of wine at the 720 Bar and Grill. Nothing extravagant — just good food, good wine, and a quiet moment to take stock of the fact that we’re really here.
Eight more nights to go. Chicago, we’re just getting started. 🍷
Next up: Day 2 — Mark hits the streets while Alicia dives into the conference. Stay tuned!
We eased into the day with a slow morning, lingering over coffee and soaking in the views of the Chisos Mountains right outside our window. Nature provided an unexpected show as clouds appeared to pour over the mountain rim and spill into the Basin below—a mesmerizing sight that reminded us why Big Bend National Park is so special.
By late morning, we were ready to head out for our first hike: Grapevine Hills. Reaching the trailhead is an adventure of its own, with a gravel road that can be rough in spots but is well worth the effort.
The Grapevine Hills are a fascinating laccolith, formed when magma pushed upward beneath the surface and later erosion exposed the rock. Up close, the hills look like a chaotic jumble of massive boulders. The hike begins easily, following a dry wash through the center of the formation. That changes in the final quarter mile, where the trail climbs into the rocks and turns into a true scramble.
We took our time navigating the boulders, carefully picking our way upward. While keeping our balance, we couldn’t help but think how much our grandkids would love this kind of hands-on adventure. The payoff comes at the end: a massive boulder perfectly balanced atop two others, framing a stunning view of the distant Chisos Mountains—one of Big Bend’s most iconic sights.
After lunch back in the Basin, we set out for the final hike of this trip: the Pinnacles Trail to Juniper Flats. Like many Chisos trails, the views are rewarding all along the way, but the climb to Juniper Flats—about 240 feet above the Basin—opens up an especially impressive panorama. From this vantage point, we could take in Casa Grande to the east, Toll Mountain and Emory Peak to the south, the Window to the west, and the Basin spread out below us to the north.
The Pinnacles Trail continues deeper into the high Chisos, eventually reaching Boot Canyon and the South Rim. That kind of strenuous trek wasn’t in the cards for this trip, but it definitely got us wondering whether it might be possible in the future—with a more dedicated training program. Big Bend has a way of inspiring new goals.
We wrapped up our day with a short ranger-led walk near the Window View Trail, learning more about the park’s natural and human history. Just as we returned to our room, the Chisos Mountains ignited with deep reds and oranges as the sun set. It was the perfect ending to a memorable final evening in Big Bend National Park.
See our Short from today’s adventures…
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