DARIUS NABORS, 59in59:

My name is Darius Nabors. And I am visiting all 59 national parks in 59 weeks to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service.

We started our trip in Virginia, and then we drove to Ohio, to Cuyahoga Valley National Park. And then we kind of went north through Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, and up to Alaska.

One of the great things that we saw in Alaska in Katmai National Park was the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes. So, in 1912, there was the largest volcanic eruption in the 20th century. And the scale was just huge. And we hiked onto this valley that had 700 feet of ash and pumice. So you went from being in this, like, verdant green Alaska forest to walking on the moon in just a matter of minutes.

We came to Washington and did one of my all-time favorite hikes, where we hiked around Mount Rainier on the Wonderland Trail. While we were there, there was also the super blood moon eclipse. And so one of the nights, we hiked back out and saw the moon as it was coming out of the eclipse and kind of rising over Mount Rainier.

And just came from Sequoia National Park, where they have some of the largest trees in the world, and the scale and immensity of these trees is really indescribable. You're standing at the base of it, looking up, and the tree's as tall as a football field, and you just can't — you can't get a sense of scale because it is so tall.

And right now, we're actually in Death Valley. We lucked out, because once about every 10 years, Death Valley has what's called a superbloom. And, so, when they have really big rains in the fall, the wild flowers will bloom really well in the spring. And so we're going to go and visit fields of wild flowers in the hottest and driest place in the United States.

A lot of my friends ask me for great photos of the parks, and they ask me what my favorite park is or what's the coolest experience, and I think that's the really special part about it. I can't explain to you, at least not in words, what it's like to see Denali, the mountain, rise 7,000 feet above the surrounding mountains.

It's one of those places where a photograph just doesn't do it justice. And that's the thing with a lot of these parks, is, we try and capture some great photographs, but if you want to truly see these parks, you have to get out there and visit them yourself.