Ganzes Ferienhaus
Letzter Hurra, Weiblicher Hogan
Ferienhaus in perfekter Strandlage
Fotogalerie von Letzter Hurra, Weiblicher Hogan





Bewertungen
10 von 10, Sehr beliebt
1 Schlafzimmer1 BadezimmerPlatz für 5 Gäste27.9 m²
Beliebte Annehmlichkeiten
Lerne die Gegend kennen

Moab, UT
- Place, Arches National Park Visitor Center
- Place, Dead Horse Point State Park
- Place, Arches Nationalpark
- Airport, Moab, Utah (CNY-Canyonlands Field)
Zimmer und Betten
1 Schlafzimmer (Platz für 5 Personen)
Schlafzimmer 1
+1
5 große Futons
1 Badezimmer
Badezimmer 1
Toilette · Außendusche
Weitere Räumlichkeiten
Terrasse oder Patio
Veranda oder Lanai
Außendusche
Essbereich
Mehr zu dieser Unterkunft
Letzter Hurra, Weiblicher Hogan
Base Camp und Last Hurra sind abgelegen. Ähnliche Landschaft zu den Canyonlands, ohne das ganze Volk. Viel großes Horn und Maultierhirsch. Bootsanlegestelle, Bootsrampe und Strand. Vier nebeneinander, sechs Kajaks und tolles Wandern und Klettern. Zwei Disc-Golfplätze mit furchterregendem Ruf. Fossilien, Dinosaurier-Tracks, Indische Artefakte, Petroglyphen, Finger-Canyons und Zentrum zum Jackson Hole Trail, Chicken Corner, Lockhart Basin, Hurra Pass und in der Nähe der Wind Caves und alle Radwege auf der Amasa Back. Blick auf Totes Pferd Punkt, Canyonlands, Anti-Cline und schöne Sonnenaufgänge und Sonnenuntergänge. Große Sicherheit Schildkröte, alle Arten von Eichhörnchen, Chipmunks, Vögel, und in den Abendstunden Ringtails, Stinktiere (Sie können Waschbären und Fuchs kommen, um die Veranda zu essen. Der Nachthimmel ist erstaunlich. Es ist zweifelhaft, dass du so viele Sterne gesehen hast und die Milchstraße ist ein nächtliches Ereignis für einen Großteil des Jahres.
Gib zur Preisangabe die Daten an
Ausstattung
Haustierfreundlich
Kostenloses WLAN
Klimaanlage
Außenbereich
Parkplätze verfügbar
Strandblick
Ähnliche Unterkünfte

Arches Hut
Arches Hut
- Parkplatz inbegriffen
- Kostenloses WLAN
- Wäschepflegeausstattung
- Zimmerservice
9.2 von 10, Wunderbar, (76 Bewertungen)
Hausordnung
Check-in ab 15:00 Uhr
Mindestalter für die Miete: 21 Jahre
Check-out vor 10:30 Uhr
Kinder
Kinder (0–17 Jahre) erlaubt
Veranstaltungen
Veranstaltungen sind nicht gestattet
Haustiere
Haustiere erlaubt: Hunde von bis zu je 9 kg (insgesamt maximal ein Haustier)
Rauchen
Rauchen ist nicht gestattet
Wichtige Informationen
Wissenswertes
Diese Unterkunft wird von einem professionellen Gastgeber verwaltet. Die Vermietung erfolgt zu gewerblichen, geschäftlichen oder beruflichen Zwecken.
Für zusätzliche Personen fallen möglicherweise Gebühren an, die abhängig von den Bestimmungen der Unterkunft variieren können.
Beim Check-in werden ggf. ein Lichtbildausweis und eine Kreditkarte, Debitkarte oder Kaution in bar für unvorhergesehene Aufwendungen verlangt.
Je nach Verfügbarkeit beim Check-in wird versucht, Sonderwünschen entgegenzukommen, sie können jedoch nicht garantiert werden. Eventuell fallen zusätzliche Gebühren an.
Partys oder Gruppenveranstaltungen sind auf dem Gelände der Unterkunft streng verboten.
Der Gastgeber hat angegeben, dass die Unterkunft über einen Kohlenmonoxidmelder verfügt
Der Gastgeber hat angegeben, dass es in der Unterkunft einen Rauchmelder gibt
Zu den Sicherheitsvorrichtungen dieser Unterkunft gehören ein Feuerlöscher und ein Erste-Hilfe-Kasten.
Wenn du deine Buchung stornierst, gelten die Stornierungsbedingungen des Gastgebers. Gemäß den EU-Verordnungen über Verbraucherrechte unterliegen Buchungsservices für Unterkünfte nicht dem Widerrufsrecht.
Zur Gegend
Moab
Dieses Ferienhaus in Moab liegt in ländlicher Umgebung und am Strand. Monument Basin und Swanny City Park zählen zu den Attraktionen der Region. Wer gerne shoppen geht, kommt hier auf seine Kosten: Millers Shopping Center und Valley Shopping Center. Ebenfalls einen Besuch wert sind diese beiden Highlights: Moab Recreation and Aquatic Center und Hole N The Rock. Entdecke die hiesige Tierwelt bei Aktivitäten wie Naturwanderungen und Vogelbeobachtungen.

Moab, UT
Fortbewegung vor Ort
Restaurants
- Pony Expresso
Häufig gestellte Fragen
Über den Gastgeber
Zu Gast bei Tom Higginson
Just a nice guy who knows who he is and where he's suppose to be.
Darum fiel die Entscheidung auf diese Unterkunft
I was president and founder for 25 years of a large indoor soccer company. The managers worked really hard. We all did. I wanted to find a place to get away, where we could escape from the grind. I wanted something in the boonies. Driving to our Boise facility I saw people walk out of their homes, get in their canoes, and get in the Snake River. I need a river. Driving through West Texas coming back from our Houston and Austin facilities I saw folks walk out of their homes and get on their dirt bikes and on their atvs and take off down dirt trails. I need dirt trails.
It went like that.
Sometimes I would find a property that had some things, but not all things. Sometimes I’d find something new and the hunt would grow more difficult with more requirements. Then, years later I hit the wall. I was done with 100 hour weeks and I needed an escape. I escalated my hunt for a property in the boonies. I started focusing on the four corners area central to most of our locations.
After looking at 50 or so properties my Moab real estate agent Randy Day told me about a property on the other side of Hurrah Pass. I tried to get out here to view it in the BMW but in those days the road was rough and I tore the BMW all up. Four flats and four bent rims. That's how I met Nations Towing.
Turns out Base Camp has everything and so much more. I bought this place nineteen years ago without knowing about the Wind Caves, Chicken Corner, Anti-Cline, Amasa Back, pottery sherds, arrowhead flakes, ancient dwellings, rock art, the critters of all kinds, dino tracks, fossils, all types of geology, the night sky, the quiet, the unlimited hikes and on and on. There has never been a day I haven’t appreciated what surrounds me. There never will be.
It went like that.
Sometimes I would find a property that had some things, but not all things. Sometimes I’d find something new and the hunt would grow more difficult with more requirements. Then, years later I hit the wall. I was done with 100 hour weeks and I needed an escape. I escalated my hunt for a property in the boonies. I started focusing on the four corners area central to most of our locations.
After looking at 50 or so properties my Moab real estate agent Randy Day told me about a property on the other side of Hurrah Pass. I tried to get out here to view it in the BMW but in those days the road was rough and I tore the BMW all up. Four flats and four bent rims. That's how I met Nations Towing.
Turns out Base Camp has everything and so much more. I bought this place nineteen years ago without knowing about the Wind Caves, Chicken Corner, Anti-Cline, Amasa Back, pottery sherds, arrowhead flakes, ancient dwellings, rock art, the critters of all kinds, dino tracks, fossils, all types of geology, the night sky, the quiet, the unlimited hikes and on and on. There has never been a day I haven’t appreciated what surrounds me. There never will be.
Das macht diese Unterkunft einzigartig
Things to know:
You should bring your own food and anything you’d like to drink besides water. Pretty much everything else is here. It’s 17 miles from Moab and it will take most a little over an hour. You don't normally need four wheel drive but you should have at least six inches of ground clearance. Without it your vehicle and Mother Earth may have occasional inappropriate relationships. If height is an issue you will have lots of issues up and down Hurrah Pass.
Things are not static. They don’t stay the same all the time. The road changes, a rock falls down, there is a rain storm, anything can change the road. It may be fine in the morning and deteriorate in the afternoon, for multiple reasons. I mention the beach, but sometimes I don’t have one during snow melt and slightly after and the locations of the beach could change. In June and early July generally we have mosquitoes but hardly got any this year depending on the high water mark. We have a Milky Way most nights but in December and January it’s more difficult to see than in mid summer. I have a six seater side by side for guests to use but sometimes it breaks and goes in the shop so I might not have one while you are here but that's pretty rare. I feed critters at night on the front porch of the lodge. Some nights some critters don’t come or they take a long time to come. I have no control over who shows up when. Kobae usually hangs out on the porch in March, April, May, and early June. Once it gets hot he retreats in his hole and I generally only see him once a day when he comes out to eat until end of August and then he’ll want to go hiking every day, for miles. He’s not here from mid November thru late February when he goes to San Diego for the winter. He's a snowbird.
You should bring your own food and anything you’d like to drink besides water. Pretty much everything else is here. It’s 17 miles from Moab and it will take most a little over an hour. You don't normally need four wheel drive but you should have at least six inches of ground clearance. Without it your vehicle and Mother Earth may have occasional inappropriate relationships. If height is an issue you will have lots of issues up and down Hurrah Pass.
Things are not static. They don’t stay the same all the time. The road changes, a rock falls down, there is a rain storm, anything can change the road. It may be fine in the morning and deteriorate in the afternoon, for multiple reasons. I mention the beach, but sometimes I don’t have one during snow melt and slightly after and the locations of the beach could change. In June and early July generally we have mosquitoes but hardly got any this year depending on the high water mark. We have a Milky Way most nights but in December and January it’s more difficult to see than in mid summer. I have a six seater side by side for guests to use but sometimes it breaks and goes in the shop so I might not have one while you are here but that's pretty rare. I feed critters at night on the front porch of the lodge. Some nights some critters don’t come or they take a long time to come. I have no control over who shows up when. Kobae usually hangs out on the porch in March, April, May, and early June. Once it gets hot he retreats in his hole and I generally only see him once a day when he comes out to eat until end of August and then he’ll want to go hiking every day, for miles. He’s not here from mid November thru late February when he goes to San Diego for the winter. He's a snowbird.
Sprachen:
Englisch
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