![]() ![]() Find an empty parking spot and get ready for your hike to the famous slot canyon and rock formations along the White Dome Trail. Turn right and drive for about 5.6 miles to the White Domes day use area. Please be courteous to the other trail users. Drive for approximately 3.3 miles along Valley of Fire Highway until you reach the intersection. It is not suggested to ride this trail during peak times, as there are many hikers and you WILL be traveling fast on the descent. Getting to this trail requires the JBER iSportsman Pass (available here: /). Note: There is an alternate route from Basher Road to get to the T intersection, but it eliminates the second half of the trail, which is the very fun flowy section. Once on the overlook, you can turn around the head down or keep climbing up and gain the ridgeline to the west (obvious trail) and extend this ride longer.Įnjoy the ride down At the T intersection, make a right and keep on smiling. Just below the overlook, there is a STEEP, loose rocky climb. Take a left at this T, the climb continues, with several steeper sections and more technical terrain. Once on the trail, there is a steady climb with punchy steep sections until you get to a T intersection. Ride the gravel road for about a half mile(roughly), keeping an eye to the right for the unmarked clearing with a trail leading into the woods. **From this point, you need to be signed in to the JBER iSportsman website.** Once past this gate, you'll descend a little more doubletrack and cross a wooden/metal bridge. Follow the doubletrack trail for a couple of miles, passing the stout metal fence next to Stuckagain Heights Trail. To get to the trailhead, park at the North Bivouac trailhead on the left when heading up Campbell Airstrip Road. There are VERY steep sections, that even the best climbers will have to hike their bikes up, but the payoff is well worth the pain. I would recommend anyone who visit Boston and is interested in learning history or simply just want to listen to funny stories Han Yu W.This is one of the best Anchorage area singletrack trails for riders that like a climbing challenge and can handle higher speeds with limited sight-lines and technical terrain. That is to say, in this tour you can also learn about the myth and the truth of the history we learned from our textbooks. The Freedom Trail Walking tour presents full of historic knowledge and our guide, Parker, provides us the best experience for this amazing learning adventure. For the money, it’s hard to beat! Bluff City It was a nice 1.5 hr walking tour hitting most of the south end Freedom Trail points of interest. ![]() Great tour with Isaiah Thomas! Great local guide who was very engaging and a walking encyclopedia of Boston history. Our tour guide was fantastic! One member of my group uses a wheelchair, and the guide was great about leading the WHOLE tour through accessible entrances to sites and to sidewalks with curb cuts so that all of us could participate without feeling singled out. We were a few minutes late for the start of the 1pm tour but easily able to catch up and join in.! The Freedom Trail is a 2.5-mile-long (4.0 km) path through Boston that passes by 17 locations significant to the history of the United States, marked largely with brick. We only had 1 day to explore downtown Boston, and this tour was a great way to see several different sites, learn about history, and get a bit of walking in. Freedom Trail marker through a red brick sidewalk Freedom Trail next to Faneuil Hall. They were energetic, informed, and brought history to life. ![]() We had a wonderful time and your guides were wonderful. He has been a tour guide in Boston for many years, and he had a ton of interesting stories and facts beyond the typical revolutionary war factoids. The 1.5 hour length is the right duration for kids, and our guide, Jeremiah Poope (his actual last name!), kept it interesting the entire time. I did the full trail many, many years ago but decided to go with this shorter, more compact trail with our family. ![]() The Freedom Trail is one of the iconic touristy things to do in Boston, and there's a reason for that. ![]()
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