This summer, Americans are moving toward shorter, regional, and drive-market trips as rising costs and economic uncertainty move travel budgets closer to home. Domestic leisure spending is still growing, but a new forecast shows travelers trading down to closer, lower-cost experiences. Outdoor destinations are absorbing much of that demand.
National Parks Deliver Full-Day Picnic Experiences
National parks deliver full-day picnic experiences. Few settings do more with a single afternoon than a national park. Yellowstone, Acadia, and Great Smoky Mountains all offer designated picnic areas woven into terrain that includes hiking trails, wildlife-viewing corridors, and scenic overlooks.
Waterfront parks pair scenery with open space. Lake Tahoe and Cape Cod move at a slower pace than mountain parks, more centered on the water and better suited to afternoons that start with a blanket and end with a swim. Public beaches and lakefront parks at both destinations offer easy access to walking paths, viewpoints, and open recreation areas.
Scenic Drives Create Natural Stopping Points
Scenic drives create natural stopping points. The Blue Ridge Parkway and Going-to-the-Sun Road were not designed with picnics in mind, but both create the conditions that make an outdoor meal worthwhile: dramatic elevation, long views, and terrain that encourages stopping. Overlooks along both routes offer level ground and room to spread out without planning ahead.
State parks offer close-to-home outdoor access. Not every summer trip requires an overnight stay or a long drive. State parks offer hiking, fishing, kayaking, and swimming within reach of most major metro areas, and many provide picnic facilities that need no reservation.
Original reporting: KTBS 3 (Shreveport) — read the source article.