Days Inn Rock Springs - Rock Springs Hotels, Wyoming
Days Inn Rock Springs 2 Stars Hotel in Rock Springs, Wyoming - USA Within US Travel Directory Situated off Interstate 80, this hotel is a 5 minute drive from Rock Springs Historical Museum.
It features an outdoor seasonal pool and guest rooms with free Wi-Fi.
Classic guest rooms at the Days Inn Rock Springs are furnished with a microwave and a refrigerator.
Each includes wood furniture, coffee facilities and cable TV.
Free local telephone calls can be made from all rooms.
A gift shop and laundry facilities are available at the hotel.
Guests can also work in the business center.
Rock Springs Days Inn is 3.
2 km from Western Wyoming Community College.
The landmark, Boars Tusk, is 54.
1 km away.
Days Inn Rock Springs - Rock Springs Hotels, Wyoming
Location in : 1545 Elk Street, WY 82901, Rock Springs, Wyoming
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WYOMING ROAD TRIP! -wyoming travel diary || Lindsey Grace
My friend and I took a roadtrip down to Jackson Hole wyoming!
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History Made Vivid: The Interior Museum at 80
With the Interior Museum’s 80th anniversary in March 2018 comes the opportunity to reflect upon its innovative origins. Interior Secretary Harold Ickes envisioned the museum playing a key role at the new Interior headquarters, and when it opened in the midst of the Great Depression, it was a truly novel addition for a federal office building. Interior Museum Chief Curator Tracy Baetz will explore how one wing of the headquarters was popularly transformed into history made vivid. Get a glimpse of how state-of-the art exhibition techniques of the 1930s achieved groundbreaking results that highlighted what was important to the Department in the interwar period.
Western Writers of America Hall of Fame
Wyoming Chronicle visits with western authors at the Western Writers of America Hall of Fame in Cody in 2017.
Campus Tour - Prexy's Pasture
Tom Rea and WyoHistory.org
Wyoming Chronicle meets Casper resident Tom Rea who is editor and co-founder with the Wyoming State Historical Society of WyoHistory.org
Ranger of the Lost Art
Learn about rediscovery of the WPA/Federal Art Project poster series and the continued tradition today. Artists Doug Leen and Brian Maebius discuss the history of the program and how, using one surviving poster and photographs found through 20 years of research, they painstakingly reconstructed the original set. Today over 30 national parks are represented through their contemporary designs.
Ranger of the Lost Art: The Return of WPA Posters to the Public
Join former seasonal National Park ranger Doug Leen as he recounts his 50 year quest through dusty attics, junk shops, stuffed garages, and courtrooms to rediscover and collect original National Park posters from a series created by the WPA from 1938 to 1941. Since starting this journey, 12 of the 14 original designs have been discovered.
Risky Business: The Ghost Town of Kirwin - Main Street, Wyoming
The story of Kirwin, an abandoned mining camp deep in Wyoming's Absoroka Mountains and the risk takers involved in its history. From early explorers, outlaws and hard rock miners, to arctic adventurers and Amelia Earhart; this remote location drew a remarkable cast of characters. Today, its natural beauty and rich past continue.
Casper, Wyoming
Casper is a city in and the county seat of Natrona County, Wyoming, United States. Casper is the second-largest city in Wyoming, according to the 2010 census, with a population of 55,316. Only Cheyenne, the state capital, is larger. Casper is nicknamed The Oil City and has a long history of oil boomtown and cowboy culture, dating back to development of the nearby Salt Creek Oil Field. In 2010, Casper was named the highest-ranked family-friendly small city in the West, and ranked eighth overall in the nation in Forbes magazine's list of the best small cities to raise a family.
Casper is located in east-central Wyoming at the foot of Casper Mountain, the north end of the Laramie Mountain Range, along the North Platte River.
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Photography of Sara Wiles - Main Street, Wyoming
Sara Wiles began taking pictures of Northern Arapaho people as a social worker on the Wind River Indian Reservation. The photos were a chronicle and a gift to Indian families; now they tour art galleries and museums across the country. Wiles retains her close ties to the reservation friends and families, even as she breaks new ground in her effort to use photographs to tell the stories of people and cultures.
The hunt for Forrest Fenn's $2 million hidden treasure
The secret is hidden in a poem that starts like this: Begin it where warm waters halt.
Zack wrote an entire feature filled with maps, illustrated clues, and even more video. You can read and watch here:
Sometime between 2009 and 2010 an 80 year old man by the name of Forrest Fenn trekked out into the Rocky Mountains and hid a bronze chest filled with over $2 million dollars worth of treasure. The secret to the location of the treasure is contained within a six stanza poem. Forrest Fenn's treasure, as it's come to be known, has captivated men, women, and children around the country and world and has lured many people to the Rocky Mountains in the hopes that they'll find the gold.
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Capitol Outlook Week 2 (2019)
Guests include Revenue Chairmen Case and Zwonitzer, Profile Rep. Albert Sommers, Wyoming Auditor Kristi Racines, President Perkins and Speaker Harshman.
Indian Petroglyphs in Idaho | Celebration Park
Nearly 14,000 years ago, prehistoric Lake Bonneville breached a natural dam at Red Rock Pass in Southern Idaho – a catastrophic event that drained the lake into the Snake River at a rate of nearly 15-million cubic feet per second. Large basalt boulders were tumbled for several miles until they settled in what is now Canyon County, Idaho. 12,000 years ago, Native Americans living along the Snake River used the newly placed boulders as canvas to carve petroglyphs.
Today, the area make’s up Celebration Park which offers several recreational activities including camping, fishing, horseback riding and canoeing. The park is home to Idaho’s largest historic monument – the Guffey Railroad Bridge – which was saved from demolition when it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. It has since been restored into a beautiful pedestrian walkway.
Explore Always is produced by Kyle Frager.
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The Record of the Rocks
Evolutionists tell us that the gradual development of life has been recorded in the record of the rocks, illustrated in textbooks by the geologic column. It is seldom revealed that this column is actually a mental abstraction constructed with evolutionary assumptions. The complete column is found only in textbooks, nowhere on the face of the earth. The column does illustrate evolutionary predictions and thus provides a means of testing the evolutionary model. Leading evolutionists acknowledge that finding a contradictory sequence would falsify evolution. Dr. Patton demonstrates that this has been done again and again: skeletons of modern men, fossilized human footprints and human artifacts in the same layer with dinosaurs; Native American petroglyphs of dinosaurs; Peruvian and Mexican dinosaur artifacts. This is crucial, exciting evidence that you should see for yourself.
Dr. Patton has a broad educational background; four years at Florida College, Temple Terrace, FL (Bible); two years at Austin Peay State University, Clarksville, TN (Geology); two years at Indiana Univ./Purdue Univ., Indianapolis, IN (Geology); two years, Pacific School of Graduate Studies. He has worked as Geologist in US, Canada, Australia, England, Mexico, Peru, Bolivia, Cambodia, Israel, and Jordan. Dr. Patton has participated in dinosaur excavations in Colorado, Texas, Utah, Wyoming and Canada. He is credited with excavating the longest consecutive dinosaur trail in North America, totaling 157 tracks, extending over 500 feet. He is a member of the Geological Society of America and was a speaker at their 1997 annual convention. Dr. Patton lectures at universities accross the United States. He has conducted up to twelve Creation/Evolution Seminares a year for twenty five years. He has participated in numerous public debates on creation/evolution including radio and TV debates. He has testified three times before Texas State Textbook Committe, Austin, TX. Presently, Dr. Patton is consulting geologist & partner in Mazada Corporation, Dallas, TX. He is a staff geologist of the Creation Evidence Museum, Glen Rose, TX, staff geologist for the Qumran Plateau excavation in Israel, an area supervisor at the City of David excavation in Jerusalem and chairman of the Metroplex Institute of Origon Science. He preaches for the Melrose church of Christ in Richardson, Texas.
I believe EL [God] created the heavens and the earth in six days (Genesis 1:1-31)
I believe The Creation took place approximately 6243 years ago (which I calculated using as a reference Genesis 5:1-32,Genesis 11:10-32,the years of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,+ Egyptian captivity 430 years (Exodus 12:40),+Judges of Israel 450 years (Acts 13:20),+Kings of Israel and Judah until the Babylonian captivity (Saul ~40 years,David 40 years (2Samuel 5:5), Solomon 40 years (1Kings 11:42),Rehoboam 17 years (1Kings 14:21),Abijam 3 years (1Kings 15:2),Asa 41 years (1Kings 15:10),Jehoshaphat 25 years (1Kings 22:42),Joram 8 years (2Kings 8:17),Ahaziah 1 year (2Kings 8:26),Athaliah 7 years (2Kings 11:3),Jehoash 40 years (2Kings 12:1),Amaziah 29 years (2Kings 14:2),Azariah 52 years (2Kings 15:2),Jotham 16 years (2Kings 15:33),Ahaz 16 years (2Kings 16:2),Hezekiah 29 years (2Kings 18:2),Manasseh 55 years (2Kings 21:1),Amon 2 years (2Kings 21:19),Josiah 31 years (2Kings 22:1),Jehoahaz 3 months (2Kings 23:31),Jehoiakim 11 years (2Kings 23:36),Jehoiachin 3 months (2Kings 24:8),+Babylonian captivity 70 years (Jeremiah 29:10),+Messianic prophecy 490 years (Daniel 9:24-25) a week 7 days,a day=a year (Numbers 14:34), +2012 years after Christ
Rt. 66: Don Robinson, April 4, 2018
The “Trucking on Route 66” oral history project is a collaborative initiative of the Missouri State University Libraries and Ozarks Alive (OzarksAlive.com). This project is made possible in part by a grant from the Route 66 Corridor Preservation Program of the National Parks Service.
Interview with Don Robinson, former truck driver, by MSU Dean of Library Services Tom Peters. Interview took place at Mr. Robinson’s brother’s home in Lebanon, Missouri, on April 4, 2018.
Topics discussed include brief biographical sketch, how he got started in trucking in 1960, buying his first tractor trailer rig, moving from Minnesota to Belleview Missouri, working for Hays McClain in St. Louis hauling steel, flatbed hauling, step deck trailer, break downs and electrical problems, fatal head-on collision with drunk driver, driving someone else’s truck, periods of time away from trucking, what kept drawing him back to trucking, driving the same Peterbilt truck for 24 years, driving a considerations when driving a truck outside of the country, changes in trucks and trucking between the 1960s and 1980s, driving for Prime Inc. based in Springfield Missouri, changes in roadways over the years, driving on Route 66 in Illinois, Dixie truck stop in McLean Illinois, checking in with dispatcher in the early days, Missouri truck stops Thunderbird in Sullivan and Crescent in Rolla, parents running the Crescent truck stop in the early 1960s, gas and diesel fuel, how changes in the highway effected business, Missouri truck stops T&T in Doolittle and Midway in Sleeper and Garbage Can in Niangua and Seven Gables in Springfield, how expenses were paid in the early days, amenities of truck stops, sleeping in the truck, truck seats, hauling to the west and east coasts, hauling produce and refrigerated items in the 1980s and 90s, coordinating pick-ups on both end of a run, working with Transcontinental Leasing in St. Louis and Deaton and Malone in Birmingham Alabama, getting his own trucking authority, other drivers working for him driving his trucks, regulations, log books and tracking, Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association study on time spent at docks, health considerations, truck stops out west, interstate highway system, narrow roadways and other dangerous road conditions, accidents, day and night driving, top icing, solo and team driving, independent and company driving, weather and grade considerations, Jake brakes, memories of parents running Crescent truck stop including a restaurant and service station, regulation and deregulation, trip leasing, International Fuel Tax Agreement, enthusiasm for travel, wintering in Texas, Texas road conditions, Pacific Northwest scenery, ordering trucks and assembling, story about truck climbing a steep hill, heavy and wide loads.
Biblical Series I: Introduction to the Idea of God
Lecture I in my Psychological Significance of the Biblical Stories series from May 16th at Isabel Bader Theatre in Toronto. In this lecture, I describe what I consider to be the idea of God, which is at least partly the notion of sovereignty and power, divorced from any concrete sovereign or particular, individual person of power. I also suggest that God, as Father, is something akin to the spirit or pattern inherent in the human hierarchy of authority, which is based in turn on the dominance hierarchies characterizing animals.
Q & A Starts: 1:57:25
Producer Credit and thanks to the following $200/month Patreon supporters. Without such support, this series would not have happened: Adam Clarke, Alexander Meckhai’el Beraeros, Andy Baker, Arden C. Armstrong, Badr Amari, BC, Ben Baker, Benjamin Cracknell, Brandon Yates, Chad Grills, Chris Martakis, Christopher Ballew, Craig Morrison, Daljeet Singh, Damian Fink, Dan Gaylinn, Daren Connel, David Johnson, David Tien, Donald Mitchell, Eleftheria Libertatem, Enrico Lejaru, George Diaz, GeorgeB, Holly Lindquist, Ian Trick, James Bradley, James N. Daniel, III, Jan Schanek, Jason R. Ferenc, Jesse Michalak, Joe Cairns, Joel Kurth, John Woolley, Johnny Vinje, Julie Byrne, Keith Jones, Kevin Fallon, Kevin Patrick McSurdy, Kevin Van Eekeren, Kristina Ripka, Louise Parberry, Matt Karamazov, Matt Sattler, Mayor Berkowitz , Michael Thiele, Nathan Claus, Nick Swenson , Patricia Newman, Robb Kelley, Robin Otto, Ryan Kane, Sabish Balan, Salman Alsabah, Scott Carter, Sean C., Sean Magin, Sebastian Thaci, Shiqi Hu, Soheil Daftarian, Srdan Pavlovic, Starting Ideas, Too Analytical, Trey McLemore, William Wilkinson, Yazz Troche, Zachary Vader
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10 Best Places to Live in Colorado | 2018
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10 Best Places to Live in Colorado.
You can easily see why people love Colorado. The state's varied natural beauty beckons outdoor fans with mountain, plateau, and forest landscapes. Families living in Colorado enjoy welcoming communities with a range of schools for their children. The state also hosts abundant lively festivals and events year-round.
As residents of Colorado for more than 25 years, Collegiate Painters knows Colorado. Whether you're in Boulder or Jefferson County, you can be sure Collegiate Painters is nearby. Trust us to offer painting services to keep your Colorado home looking its best while protecting it from the elements. Get to know the state we call home with the following guide to Colorado's cities.
1. Boulder
2. Louisville
3. Superior
4. Longmont
5. Niwot
6. Erie
7. Lafayette
8. Evergreen
9. Golden
10. Lakewood
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George H.W. Bush's funeral service in D.C.
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Former president George H.W. Bush's remains were moved to Washington National Cathedral for his funeral, which was attended by family members and dignitaries including President Trump. Eulogies were given by historian Jon Meacham, former senator Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.), former president George W. Bush, among others. Subscribe to The Washington Post on YouTube:
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THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS | CANADA - A TRAVEL TOUR - HD 1080P
A tour of some popular spots in the Canadian Rockies, among them are Banff National Park in the Province of Alberta and Yoho National Park in the Province of British Columbia.
#Canada #Travel #RockyMountains
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The main featured spots in the video are:
Town of Banff and surrounding area, Lake Louise, Town of Golden and surrounding area, Johnston Canyon etc...
The Town of Banff was the first municipality to incorporate within a Canadian national park. It is a resort town and one of Canada's most popular tourist destinations, known for its mountainous surroundings and hot springs. It is a destination for outdoor sports and features extensive hiking, biking and skiing.
Lake Louise is a glacial lake within Banff National Park in Alberta, Canada. Fairmont's Chateau Lake Louise, one of Canada's grand railway hotels, is located on Lake Louise's eastern shore. It is a luxury resort hotel built in the early decades of the 20th century by the Canadian Pacific Railway.
Johnston Creek is a tributary of the Bow River in Canada's Rocky Mountains. The creek is located in Banff National Park. A popular hiking trail follows the canyon and leads to a meadow within the Johnston Valley above the canyon. The first part of the trail consists of a constructed walkway with safety rails and bridges, while the last part of the trail is natural and more rugged.
I've had a great time visiting Northern Lights Wildlife Wolf Centre in the vicinity of the town of Golden. This wolf sanctuary and it's instructors, armed with their wealth of knowledge, give the centre's visitors a true depiction of these majestic and reclusive creatures.
I've also had the pleasure of spending the night at the Mount 7 Lodges near golden BC. The hosts were splendid as well as the accommodation. The views...spectacular!
Unfortunately, the weather during the time of the shoot was less than perfect with extended periods of cloudiness and rain. However, even under those conditions, a visit is highly recommended!
Filmed in June 2011.
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Filming Equipment:
Camera:
- Sony HDR AX2000
Camera Accessories:
- Glidecam HD-4000 hand-held camera stabilization.
- Glidecam 'Smooth Shooter' body mounted camera stabilization system.
- Sennheiser K6 module + ME66 shotgun microphone capsule.
- Manfrotto 190XB tripod with 701HDV Pro Fluid Mini Video head.