Americans have been quietly rewriting the rules of summer travel, and the proof is in the picnic basket. International Picnic Day on June 18 captures a travel preference that the numbers this summer keep confirming: more travelers are skipping the airports, the packed schedules and the ticketed attractions in favor of a cooler, a blanket and somewhere worth spending the afternoon. For a growing number of people, that is not the backup plan; it is the only plan.

This summer, Americans are moving toward shorter, regional and drive-market trips as rising costs and economic uncertainty move travel budgets closer to home. Domestic leisure spending is still growing, but a new forecast shows travelers trading down to closer, lower-cost experiences. Outdoor destinations are absorbing much of that demand. The National Park Service recorded 323 million visits across its system in 2025, with 26 parks setting new visitation records despite a 43-day partial government shutdown.
National parks deliver full-day picnic experiences
Few settings do more with a single afternoon than a national park. Yellowstone, Acadia and Great Smoky Mountains all offer designated picnic areas woven into terrain that includes hiking trails, wildlife-viewing corridors and scenic overlooks. These are places where a meal in a meadow fits naturally between a morning hike and an evening drive. Great Smoky Mountains drew 11.5 million visits last year, the highest of any national park in the country, and that number tells you something about the depth of demand for destinations where a full day outdoors is the point.
Waterfront parks pair scenery with open space
Lake Tahoe and Cape Cod move at a slower pace than mountain parks, more centered on the water and better suited to afternoons that start with a blanket and end with a swim. Public beaches and lakefront parks at both destinations offer easy access to walking paths, viewpoints and open recreation areas. Travelers at both tend to build their meals around the local food economy: a waterfront market, a bakery, a seafood counter. The destination provides the setting; the food comes from whoever does it best nearby.
Scenic drives create natural stopping points
The Blue Ridge Parkway and Going-to-the-Sun Road were not designed with picnics in mind, but both create the conditions that make an outdoor meal worthwhile: dramatic elevation, long views and terrain that encourages stopping. Overlooks along both routes offer level ground and room to spread out without planning ahead. Road-trip travelers commonly stock supplies from small towns along the way, which puts the meal in the context of the place and not a chain exit off the interstate.
State parks offer close-to-home outdoor access
Not every summer trip requires an overnight stay or a long drive. State parks offer hiking, fishing, kayaking and swimming within reach of most major metro areas, and many provide picnic facilities that need no reservation. For families or travelers with tighter budgets or shorter windows, a state park day covers the same ground as a more elaborate outdoor trip: fresh air, physical activity and a meal eaten outside. The only thing missing is the logistics.
The outdoor travel appetite is not letting up
The move toward drive markets and regional destinations is partly a cost response, but it also tracks a longer pattern. Americans have consistently put outdoor recreation at the top of their travel priorities, and the infrastructure to support it already exists in most corners of the country. Parks, lakeshores, scenic byways and state lands do not require much advance planning. International Picnic Day is a minor calendar observance, but it points to something real: the destinations drawing record visitor numbers this summer are often the same ones where a picnic makes complete sense.
Jennifer Allen is a retired chef turned traveler, cookbook author and nationally syndicated journalist; she’s also a co-founder of Food Drink Life, where she shares expert travel tips, cruise insights and luxury destination guides. A recognized cruise expert with a deep passion for high-end experiences and off-the-beaten-path destinations, Jennifer explores the world with curiosity, depth and a storyteller’s perspective. Her articles are regularly featured on the Associated Press Wire, The Washington Post, Seattle Times, MSN and more.