
Still haven’t gotten a Daily Hiker T-shirt? Well, here’s your chance.
This time around, we’re going to do National Park trivia. The first person to leave the correct answer as a comment to this post gets a shirt. Note that you’ll need to enter a valid email address so we can contact you. If you don’t, the prize goes to the next person that correctly answers it and leaves an email.
So, here’s your question:
What National Park, first settled by the Yokut and Monache tribes is famous for its General?
Sequoia National park
I was thinking Kings Canyon with General Grant, but General Sherman is in Sequoia and fits. So, Anna gets the shirt
Custer
Sequoia
Sequoia National Park, California
Sequoia & Kings Canyon
Kings Canyon NP!!! The General in question is General Grant.
It’s General Sherman
Sequoia national park!
Lol too slow
. Fun question though!
Sequoia National Park
The Kaweah River
sequoia
Yosemite National Park
Sequoia National Park
Sequoia National Park.
definately Kings Canyon but someone beat me to it…ask any AT legends and lore and I’d most likely be on top of it!! I loved this and still want a t-shirt!!! In 1940, General Grant was absorbed into the new and larger Kings Canyon National Park which eventually grew to include the South Fork of the Kings River and 456,552 acres of backcountry wilderness. Managed as one park, together Sequoia and Kings Canyon total over 863,700 acres.
A small portion of what is now Kings Canyon was originally set aside in 1890 as General Grant National Park. Final answer.
too late….kings canyon
Sequoia & Kings Canyon Natioanal Park
Yosemite National Park
This intuition about the vintage of I Love New York t-shirts is correct. The origin of the design was in 1977: the Deputy Commissioner of the New York State Department of Commerce, William S. Doyle, knew that New York had incredible potential to attract tourists. At the same time, he was aware that many tourists didn’t bother to visit the city — some were worried about crime, or annoyed by high prices, but most simply never thought to go there. He needed a slogan that would not convince people that it was a good city to visit — he needed a slogan that would take the millions of people who were already convinced, and catalyze their decision to make the trip.