If the movies are playing on the TV… visitors will get excited and buy them… if it’s a blank screen, no one will even know that we have movies for sale.
Author: Ron
Day-to-Day, Schedules
Sandhill Crane Viewing Day
by Ron •
Day-to-Day, Policies
Monument Reminds Hunters of Regulations
by Ron •

DINOSAUR, CO & JENSEN, UT – With hunting season now occurring on lands surrounding Dinosaur National Monument, hunters are reminded that hunting is not permitted in the monument. Although most of the monument boundary is well marked, hunters are responsible for ensuring they do not hunt within the monument. By knowing and understanding the rules…
Day-to-Day
The Seasons They Are A Changing
by Ron •

Beginning Monday, Sept 17, the Quarry Visitor Center and Quarry Exhibit Hall go to Fall/Winter hours. They will both be open daily, 9:00 am to 5:00 pm. Starting Monday, the shuttle between the visitor center and exhibit hall will operate only on Saturdays and Sunday through mid-October. On weekdays, visitors drive their personal vehicle to…
Uncategorized
September 11, 2001
by Ron •
Day-to-Day
They’re Finally Here!
by Ron •
We’ve been waiting all summer for the road construction on SR 149 to get to our end of the road… it is finally here! They will have to make a couple of passes and do the west end of our parking lot but we’re almost there. They are supposed to lay down another strip of…
Day-to-Day, Policies, Training
Accuracy is Crucial
by Ron •
Accuracy when ringing up sales in the Quickbooks POS is very, very important. Please note the following points: Scanning the barcode or price tag with a barcode will always be the most accurate. Guessing at the name or description of an item has a high chance of being wrong. The POS system includes items that we…
Day-to-Day
Rare triassic pterosaur discovered by BYU paleontologists
by Ron •
https://news.byu.edu/news/rare-triassic-pterosaur-discovered-byu-paleontologists When Brooks Britt, a geological sciences professor at BYU, searched through the latest Triassic sandstone samples in his lab, he expected to find bones of early crocodiles and dinosaurs. Instead, he discovered the bones of a new pterosaur specimen, now named Caelestiventus (heavenly wind) hanseni. Dating back more than 200 million years, it’s one of the earliest…

