How To Use Back country In A Sentence

  • They were traversing Windy Ridge in Uintah back country known for heavy avalanche activity, he said.
  • I have arrowed an elk every trip out there and when you get in the back country you do not see anyone. 10 Best Public Lands for Elk (And How to Hunt Them)
  • The hinterland (back country) is jungle and has very few roads.
  • If you're looking to get up close and personal with the black bears and/or grizzles in the wilderness, this May through October, head to British Columbia and try either the three-hour Whistler tour in a 4x 4 up the mountain, a six-hour boat tour further north, and bear packages which include accommodations in the back country and river lodges for two to six day tours. Margie Goldsmith: 5 Places To Meet The Bears In B.C.
  • Castle's skier-owners embrace their mountain's wild and woolly side, even listing precarious local back country descents on the resort website. Times, Sunday Times
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  • But the epic journey traversed by the other two girls took place in some of the harshest outback country in Australia.
  • If you took a map of Australia and drew a wonky circle around the middle of the country, you'd land in the outback: red dirt, sparely inhabited, the back country.
  • Many feel it's a memorial to all the hard working men who forged trails through inhospitable blocks of back country.
  • Who wants to, in accordance with the special but pizza back country, lived a civilians life.
  • Weather conditions are set to improve by Thursday, and pilots will take advantage, taking-off and climbing in thermals into the wilds of the high Alpine back country.
  • Thirteen remain in the Santa Barbara County back country.
  • I've been out every weekend this summer hiking the back country carrying twice this weight.
  • Movement towards the interior was movement up the country (from as early as 1805) or into the back country; movement towards the settled districts was movement down the country or in: travelers came in from the bush as they can now come in to a station, though out, except in collocations like outdistrict, outfarm, outsettler, outsettlement, belongs to a later period. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIX No 3
  • So those of you thinking about going hiking maybe this weekend into the Colorado Rockies, down to the San Juan, across the Wasatch and Siuwincas (ph) and up into parts of Idaho and Montana, we have what we call a considerable threat of avalanche danger in the back country areas. CNN Transcript Feb 18, 2007
  • Being a city girl, the idea of trekking to a back country cabin did not appeal to her in the slightest. Remote « First 50 Words – Writing Prompts
  • Alternatively, you can eschew the usual headlong rush of the resort and take off into the back country on a pair of snowshoes or touring skis.
  • Evenings I longed for the lisp of Poitiers, the sarcasm of the Angevin back country. The Best American Poetry 2008
  • They moved into runs in the drier back country rather than deal with established squatters and selectors.
  • Many a dry watercourse, that is now but a slight depression, could be utilised as a channel for conducting the flood waters to the back country. The History of Australian Exploration from 1788 to 1888
  • My imagination caught fire as I envisioned myself as some kind of lantern-jawed “Dudley Do Right”, heroically battling forest fires like a Montana smoke jumper, pulling off death defying back country rescues in the mountain wilderness, and performing other Forest Rangerly and manly acts of derring-do. Buffalo Bob and the Honey Dipper
  • There were hundreds of them in the seldom disturbed back country of the big runs: wild cleanskin cows, and bulls with murder in their heart and absolutely no fear of man.
  • Although women could work in slums or in the back country of foreign lands, national suffrage would surely permanently soil them.
  • In the 1990's a number of residential projects in cismontane oak savannahs and open mixed chaparral habitats are likely to endanger some back country populations of this inconspicuous annual.
  • Alternatively, you can eschew the usual headlong rush of the resort and take off into the back country on a pair of snowshoes or touring skis.
  • Sanders is among dozens of activists who recently began calling themselves the Back Country Coalition.
  • The word "clodhoppers" was coined to describe early congressmen from the back country of Pennsylvania. RutlandHerald.com

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