Arkansas’s natural beauty draws sightseers in cars and on motorcycles for breathtaking rides across the state. Here’s a look at a few popular routes:

• Scenic Byway 7 takes travelers from the Louisiana state line through the piney woods of south Arkansas, the eastern Ouachita Mountains, across the Arkansas River Valley and through the Ozark Mountains to Bull Shoals Lake on the Missouri border.

• State Highways 27, 23, 21 and 5 are other popular north-to-south sightseeing venues in the Ozarks. Popular east-to-west routes crossing the Ozarks include state Highway 14, which begins near the banks of the Mississippi River and ends west of Omaha on the shoreline of Table Rock Lake, and state Highway 16 from Searcy to Siloam Springs. Heading east out of Fayetteville, before turning south, state Highways 16 and 23 combine to form the winding Pig Trail Scenic Byway. U.S. Highway 71 and Interstate 540 form the Boston Mountains Scenic Loop.
 
• Crowley’s Ridge Parkway – a National Scenic Byway – begins in the northeast corner of the state at St. Francis and continues to its southernmost point at Helena-West Helena.

• Great River Road, also a National Scenic Byway, winds through the eastern part of the state. The route runs from Blytheville in the northeast to Eudora in the southeast.

• Interstate 530 runs south between Little Rock and Pine Bluff and offers brilliant colors in the spring and fall.

• Talimena Scenic Drive, another National Scenic Byway, winds for 54 miles along the crest of Rich Mountain and Winding Stair Mountain in the Ouachita National Forest between Mena and Talihina, Okla.

• Arkansas Heritage Trails offer bikers and history buffs a chance to ride eight different Civil War Trails across the state, stopping to visit famous battle sites – like Pea Ridge and Prairie Grove – along the way. Created to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, the first 1,000 bikers to travel all eight routes will receive a commemorative “I Rode the Civil War Trail” patch.