Oklahoma Outdoor Info
 

 

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A Website dedicated to Oklahomans who are interested in the Outdoors
and to Outdoor enthusiasts interested in Oklahoma.

 

  • I've created a website dedicated to the Jean Pierre Chouteau National Recreation Trail  in the hope of stirring interest and getting it rebuilt/restored. - Gray Strickland  http://www.geocities.com/graystrickland/
     
  • Fall '06 - Been goofing around with the site in a class that I teach at UCO, will get it cleaned up by the end of the semester, so please ignore any random colors, themes, etc.
     

  • All new trails guide now available at the Oklahoma Tourism site.  http://travelok.com/trails/   Be sure and share your favorite trail so that website can be updated with lots of content.
     

  • 11/29/03 - Several new stories loaded up on the site from Keith Koepsel, a teacher from Colorado who is spending a year in India teaching music on a teacher exchange.   He has been sending e-mails and posting them in a message forum at www.backpacker.com, but I asked him if I could put them all in one place and he agreed.  Read his dispatches here.
     

  • 2/26/03 - New page added to go with the to the number one page on this site, the story "How not to hike the Grand Canyon" - I have added a second page with some of the e-mails I have received about the story.

The Most Popular Items on This Site Are:

 

10/15/02 - Updated content in the areas bulleted below.

HELP!  We need your stories, trail descriptions, insights and all around outdoor enthusiasm.  
E-mail your content to
trailhead@oktrails.com  and we'll see that it gets posted to our web site!

Did you know?
Oklahoma has 12 distinct ecosystems - including mesas, sand dunes, wetlands, mountains, and tall grass prairie - second only to Texas, which has 13.

We as Oklahomans understand better than some that the hurt from 9/11 keeps on going, not only for those who lost loved ones but also for the fire, police and other rescue personnel who had to deal with the attack.  In Oklahoma City, the number of cops, fire fighters and other responders who suffered post-traumatic stress disorder was more than expected, but the attack we suffered was more than expected.  My prayers, and I hope yours too, are for those who continue to live on.  In the words of Tom Hanks in Castaway, "tomorrow the sun will rise, and my job is to keep on living."
 
 - David Franklin, Oktrails.com webmaster

 

 

A Website dedicated to Oklahomans who are interested in the Outdoors
and to Outdoor enthusiasts interested in Oklahoma.
e-mail: trailhead@oktrails.com