Spatial memory plays a role in the way animals perceive their environments, resulting in memory-informed movement patterns that are observable to ecologists. Developing mathematical techniques to understand how animals use memory in their environments allows for an increased understanding of animal cognition. Here we describe a model that accounts for the memory of seasonal or ephemeral qualities of an animals environment. The model captures multiple behaviors at once by allowing for resource selection in the present time as well as long-distance navigations to previously visited locations within an animals home range. We performed a set of analyses on simulated data to test our model, determining that it can provide informative results from as little as one year of discrete-time location data. We also show that the accuracy of model selection and parameter estimation increases with more location data. This model has potential to identify cognitive mechanisms for memory in a variety of ecological systems where periodic or seasonal revisitation patterns within a home range may take place.