Rocky Mountain National Park
Just For Kids
The park has a "Rocky's Junior Ranger Program" geared toward children in kindergarten through eighth grade. Emphasis is placed on park preservation, flora and fauna facts, and environmental education. When kids complete the Junior Ranger program, they earn a badge. Check at a visitor center for information.
"Kid's Adventure" is a ranger-led program for kids 6 to 12 years old. It focuses on hands-on activities that teach kids about the park's geology and wildlife. At the "Skins and Skulls" talk, kids touch animal skulls and hides while learning about moose, elk, bighorn sheep, bobcats and other creatures.
"Importance of Being a Bea-ver," "Tales for Tots," "Bug A Ranger," "Feathers N' Such," and "Wetland Detec-tives" are terrific programs led by park rangers. Kids and adults can learn how beavers make their home in the harsh Rocky Mountain environment. Bring your Junior Ranger Log Book to earn credit for attending. Check at a visitor center for times.
Saddle up a horse and ride into the high country. This is a wonderful way for older children to see more alpine country than possible on foot. Sign up for guided rides that allow you to fish for German brown, brook, rainbow and cutthroat trout. (A state fishing license is required.) Call Glacier Creek Stables at (970) 586-3244 or Moraine Park Stables at (970) 586-2327 for more information.
At the Moraine Park Museum, see exhibits created by the Denver Museum of Natural History. The "animal, vegetable, mineral" game is fun to play after learning about the geology and wildlife of the Rockies. For example: "I'm thinking of something that's speckled when it's warm out and white when it snows." (A ptarmigan.)
Rocky Mountain In Depth
- Rocky Mountain National Park
- 10 Essentials
- Activities & Programs
- At Your Fingertips
- Bighorn Sheep
- Camping at Rocky Mountain
- Continental Divide Trail
- Estes Park
- Flora & Fauna
- Grand Lake
- Hiking Chart
- History of Rocky Mountain Park
- In A Nutshell
- Just For Kids
- Leave No Trace
- Oh, Ranger!
- Only A Day
- Preserve the Park
- Rocky Mountain Regulations
- Ticks at Rocky Mountain
- Trail Ridge Road
- Walking & Hiking
- Watermelon Snow
- Welcome to Rocky Mountain National Park
- What You Can Do
- Who's Who
- Rocky Mountain Map
- Rocky Mountain Photos
- Recent Rocky Mountain News
News from the Parks
October 14, 2008 - 9:47am
More than 100,000 miles, two motorcars, 48 states and 270 national parks later, 12-year-old Chandler Johnson still hasn’t met her goal — a goal to visit every National Park by the time she is 14. “I enjoy going to the parks because I learn about the historical, cultural and environmental relevance they each have,” said Chandler. There are currently 391 National Park areas designated by the National Park Service. For the last six and a half years, Chandler has traveled around the country with her parents, Carmen and Jay Johnson, and participated in the Junior Ranger program.
October 14, 2008 - 9:44am
From California to Costa Rica, rising temperatures could be driving species to higher elevations Chipmunks, mice and other small mammals pretty much moved up in the world as Yosemite National Park’s climate warmed during the last century. As temperatures rose, these species tended to edge upward to higher and cooler ground, says Craig Moritz, director of the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology in Berkeley, Calif. The possibility that climate change is pushing around sensitive species has been worrying biologists, so Moritz and his colleagues found a way to test the idea over an unusually long time. They resurrected the museum’s trove of field notes and revisted sites of a mammal survey that started in 1914.
October 13, 2008 - 3:54pm
The southernmost mountain in the Cascades was established as a national park in 1916. Today, Lassen is one of the best-kept secrets in the federal system. Its 10,457-foot namesake mountain dominates the western section of the park, while to the east, cinder cones rise above a lava plateau and small lakes dot the pine forests.
October 9, 2008 - 3:47pm
The Auburn-Opelika area is expected to get a boost in tourism from the opening of a completely redesigned Tuskegee Airman National Historic Site, operated by the National Park Service just down I-85 from Auburn in the nearby city of Tuskegee.
October 9, 2008 - 3:37pm
When the Carl Sandburg Home National Historic Site was established 40 years ago, the mission was to preserve legacy and literary works of Pulitzer Prize-winning author Carl Sandburg. His modest home was kept intact with all the furnishings, magazines and newspapers in place when Sandburg died in 1967. National Park Service staff designed interpretive tours of the home, and public programs were given at the dairy goat farm that Sandburg's wife, Lilian, operated.
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