Engines howl down 3,740 feet of asphalt. At the end of the longest straight in NASCAR: three corners, each demanding a different answer. The first demands a hard brake. The second demands precision. The third demands patience for the long stretch ahead. Ryan Preece runs that sequence 160 times in the No. 60 Trimble Ford Mustang Dark Horse, refusing to sacrifice speed or precision. That perseverance doesn't stop at the Tricky Triangle. It carries on, through the well-managed gamelands that ring the Poconos, to old structures recently restored and new buildings rising.
Recreation as restoration

In the dense forests surrounding the circuit, perseverance keeps local lands healthy and wildlife populations under control. Across the state, the Pennsylvania Game Commission leverages Esri's ArcGIS platform, powered by centimeter-accurate Trimble hardware, to monitor wildlife health and sustainability. Field biologists, hunters and habitat crews precisely track disease, harvest numbers and how much wildlife the land can healthily support. These data-driven initiatives ensure gamelands remain thriving and open for all Pennsylvanians to experience for generations to come.






