September 3, 2018

Wyoming adventure

We went to Wyoming a year ago, so I guess it's about time I blogged about it. Here are some of the highlights. We flew into Montana and entered the park through the Roosevelt Arch.

"For the benefit and enjoyment of the people"

We checked out the terraces at Mammoth Hot Springs. This is where we got our first taste of the smell. Oh, the smell. Some parts of Yellowstone smell like rotten eggs. SO BAD. You get used to it. Thanks, supervolcano!

Mammoth Hot Springs

Yellowstone is huge, so we stayed in two different areas of the park. Also, we went during shoulder season but it was still packed. I can't imagine what it would be like during the summer peak. The next day we went to Norris Geyser Basin. There were bubbling lakes and smelly gas. In some places, you could hear the steam/smoke escaping from the ground. One of the lakes sounded like the crackling of rice krispies.

Porcelain Basin or Mordor?

The Porcelain Basin area was much more crowded than Back Basin. We did see this little guy disobeying the sign there.

This squirrel laughs at danger.
We also went to the Museum of the National Park Ranger because I love museums and I generally drag Dave into every museum we encounter.

me and Dave

Like all NPS rangers, the ranger in the museum was very friendly. She took this photo. I imagine she does this a lot. I made us drive all over so I could collect my National Parks Passport stamps...and we got stuck in our first bison jam. Bison are everywhere in Yellowstone. We saw them every day. They will stand around in the road blocking traffic. Dave said he got tired of them, but I never did.

Yellowstone bison

We saw all kinds of beautiful wildlife in Yellowstone- bison, coyotes, pronghorns, magpies, ravens, elk, mule deer...but no wolves. We drove around Lamar Valley up until sunset looking for wolves, but alas, they were not to be found.

Lamar Valley at sunset

I didn't expect to see mountains at Yellowstone. I thought there would be geysers and smelly bits, but not this majestic beauty in the northeastern part of the park. It was dark as we drove back to the hotel, and the bison were in the road again. I could have reached out and touched them. They were grunting and snorting and kind of intimidating up close!

Something else I didn't know- there's a giant canyon in Yellowstone.

Yellowstone Falls

The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone is pretty cool. This view is from Artist Point, but we did hike down to the brink of the Lower Falls to get an up close look. Now it was time to leave this part of Yellowstone and head to the geyser part. The next part of the trip felt much more touristy. When we stayed in Canyon, we felt like we were in the wilderness. Staying right next to Old Faithful felt overrun with people.

Old Faithful
Old Faithful was neat, and we saw it erupt A LOT. It goes off every ninety minutes or so, and since we were staying right by there, it was easy to catch it when we were walking around or coming and going. It wasn't my favorite, though. Grand Geyser was my favorite.

Grand Geyser

I told Dave that time passes more slowly when you're waiting for a geyser to erupt. The National Park Service has a great app that shows the predicted eruption times of some of the geysers around the Old Faithful area. However, Old Faithful is called Old Faithful for a reason. The margin of error is very small. The margin of error for the others is pretty big. We waited over an hour and a half for Grand Geyser to erupt. WORTH IT. We saw Grand Geyser erupt in the distance when we were waiting for Castle Geyser to erupt and thought- we have to see this one up close.

Walking on the boardwalk by the Grand Prismatic Spring

I had been looking forward to seeing the Grand Prismatic Spring, and it didn't disappoint.

detail of the Grand Prismatic Spring from above

You can walk around the boardwalks right next to it, and you can see it from an overlook. It's pretty neat. Even the steam is multicolored. And you can feel the heat coming from the water.

See the tiny people?
A lot of times when I see photos of this, the saturation looks too dialed up. But this is what it really looked like. Dave's dad recommended we hike to Fairy Falls. The bad weather that would plague the rest of our trip was moving in, but we managed to hike to the falls before the rain hit.

Fairy Falls

Fairy Falls was beautiful. It's hard to capture in this crappy iPhone photo (didn't bring my big camera on this hike). This hike was through grizzly country, and it was the only time I was uneasy hiking the whole time we were there. We had bear spray, but still.



And here is where I tell the story that embarrasses Dave. We were hiking along, and all of a sudden Dave jumped in front of me with his arms out to cover me. He thought he heard a grizzly and instinctively moved to protect me from it. AW. That was nice since otherwise he couldn't stop joking about how he didn't have to outrun a grizzly if we saw one, he just had to outrun ME. Haha.

On to Grand Teton National Park! I liked Yellowstone, but I loved Grand Teton. It's too bad it rained or was overcast most of our time there. Sometimes we couldn't even see the mountains.

stormy view of the Tetons from our room

It didn't even matter. The Tetons were the most majestic mountains I've ever seen. Breathtaking. And we saw so much wildlife! I desperately wanted to see a moose, especially a bull moose. We talked to one of the rangers, and she took out a map and circled areas around the park where they had been seen lately. She was SPOT ON. I think we saw moose every day, at every place she mentioned.


It was fantastic. We drove around looking for wildlife everywhere and found it. We even saw baby moose investigating a great blue heron. We saw female moose more often than males, but we did see a couple of bulls.

bull moose

There were elk all over the place.

elk
We saw a lot of elk right near our room. One morning a couple of mule deer were hanging out a few feet from our window. One of the times we were driving around, we saw a solitary elk, and he bugled! They sound like tea kettles. You don't expect that sound to come from an elk. We heard a few more bugling during our trip. Another time we stopped to see a pronghorn who was standing right by the side of the road. I didn't even get out of the car.

pronghorn
He was gorgeous. I kept waiting, and he finally looked right at me. We saw a couple of black bears, too.

Look at those claws!
He wasn't as close as he appears in this photo. This one was hanging out eating berries, but one ran right in front of the car another time. We saw a fox in a parking lot, too. Animals everywhere! I think I startled Dave when I yelled STOP THE CAR!!!!! because I saw moose right next to the road. We were the first ones there, but soon a crowd gathered. That's what happens- either look for a crowd and you'll find animals, or if you're the first, soon a crowd will appear.

The weather kept getting worse, and it even snowed.

cloudy, snowy Tetons...and Dave

Those mountains, wow. Our flight was so early that we had to get up and drive to the airport in the middle of the night. The sky was clear for the first time during our trip so we pulled over to look at the stars. So many stars! We even saw the Milky Way. We saw a fox, too. See, animals everywhere. I'm completely in love with the Tetons, and one day I have to go back.

If you want to see more photos from the trip, check them out here.

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