Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Near the southern tip of the lake the scenic byway turns west and then southwest on OR 230. Here it follows the Rogue River, eventually merges with OR 62 near Union Creek. On its last leg the route meets up with OR 234 and passes near Upper and Lower Table Rock. The byway's terminus is at Gold Hill. The entire scenic byway is 172 miles (277 km ...
River Road Scenic Byway: 23.5 37.8 Michigan M-65 and Rollways Road near Hale: US 23 in Oscoda: September 22, 2005: Scenic drive through the Au Sable River Valley: Recreational [143] NSB Rogue-Umpqua Scenic Byway: 172.0 276.8 Oregon OR 234 at I-5 in Gold Hill: OR 138 at I-5 in Roseburg: June 13, 2002: Follows two scenic rivers through ...
Follows historic railroad and stagecoach routes leading to high mountain gold camps, fossil sites, and numerous historic sites. The Shelf and Phantom Canyon Roads cut along unpaved routes through winding canyons. Also a National Scenic Byway and a Colorado Scenic and Historic Byway. [27] [28] II Gold Butte Back Country Byway: Nevada: 62 100
"Umpqua State Scenic Corridor". Oregon Parks and Recreation Department This page was last edited on 3 August 2023, at 01:42 (UTC). Text is ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Here, US 89 is the backbone visitor highway for two U.S. National Parks. Leaving the Tetons, the road enters a lesser known park, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Memorial Parkway, before ending at the South Entrance of Yellowstone National Park. While US 89 and other U.S. Routes are officially discontinuous through the park, some commercially produced ...
Twenty-six miles of the river run through the national forest. The Rogue-Umpqua National Scenic Byway extends 172 miles (277 km) through the nearby Rogue River–Siskiyou and Umpqua national forests, as well as the Medford and Roseburg districts of the Bureau of Land Management (B.L.M.) of the United States Department of the Interior and ...
Heading north, US 191 is a divided highway for about 5 miles (8.0 kilometres) until it arrives in Clifton, the start of the road's designation as the Coronado Trail Scenic Road (both an Arizona Scenic Route and a National Scenic Byway). [1] [6] This scenic road approximates the route Francisco Vázquez de Coronado took between 1540 and 1542. [7]