Posts tagged Redwood
Cannonball Tree, Quebec City

Exploring Old Quebec City was a memorable experience. Established in 1608 by Samuel de Champlain, it’s one of the oldest cities in North America.

As we walked along Rue Saint-Louis, we were admiring the shops and the architecture when we passed this tree with a cannonball stuck inside it.

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Earthquake Lake, Montana

If you’re planning a trip to Yellowstone National Park, I would highly recommend a 27-mile detour northwest of West Yellowstone, Montana on U.S. 287. You’ll pass by Lake Hebgen, a beautiful medium sized Lake that is fed by the Madison River and formed by the Hebgen Dam where the Madison continues its flow north to the headwaters of the Missouri River.

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A Country Within A Country - Molossia (surrounded by Nevada)

A man’s home is his castle - The Stage of Popish Toyes, 1581 . Many of us have our own homes, but how many have their own country?

Atlas Obscura is one of our go-to resources, as I share on this website (rvlivinfulltime.com). It has helped point us in the direction of some really strange, usually interesting places wherever we are that otherwise we would not have known about.

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A Most Unusual Street Name, Kingston, Ontario

The Tragically Hip Way. What an unusual name for a street, and I was sure there had to be a story behind it.

We spent some time in the town of Kingston, Ontario. The city is a really nice town on the northeast shores of Lake Ontario, where the all the water from the Great Lakes flow into the Saint Lawrence River, ultimately ending up in the Atlantic Ocean.

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