Week 58 - Yellowstone & Montana - 09-23-2007
Yellow!
A funny thing happened on the way to Teton Valley. Teton Valley is
just a few miles from Jackson Hole, Wyoming. We made reservations at
the Teton Valley Campground. When we got to Teton Valley, the
campground was gone! We called and were informed that Teton Valley
Campground is in Victor, Idaho, 20 miles east of Teton Valley. Oh
well, the trip to Victor was beautiful as seen below. The road to
Victor ascend and descends at 10% grade up to 9,500 feet. The drive
was beautiful and the Mother Ship handled it with no problem. The
fourth picture below is the Grand Teton mountains on the way to
Yellowstone Park.
Yellowstone was the first and largest national park established in
1872. President Woodrow Wilson signed the National Park System bill
into law in 1916. The park sits atop one of the nations most active
volcanoes. After the last eruption the volcano collapsed on itself
leaving a 35 x 45 mile "caldera". The caldera burns below the surface
and super-heats the waters which reach the earth's surface as geysers,
mud pots, pools, steam vents and hot springs.
Below is Old Faithful which erupts about every 90 minutes. The second
photo is a picture Ellen took at 7:30 a.m. as we entered the park from
West Yellowstone. It was 35 degrees and even the Suzuki scooter was
shivering! The last picture shows beautiful terraces formed as the
Mammoth Hot Springs drips calcium carbonate down the slopes at the
park's headquarters.
Bison are the most prevalent wildlife. We saw hundreds and even drove
right by them on the scooter. They can run 30 mph, we can go 110, but
the question would be "who can accelerate the quickest?".
While the coyote below blends right into the landscape, Ellen did
manage to see it and get this photo. The moose below was very recluse.
If you want to sell postcards, just come to Yellowstone. Below are our
photos of Upper Yellowstone Falls, Yellowstone River, the Lewis River
and Gibbons Falls.
We met Pete's brother Mike at his house in Belgrade, Montana. Mike and
his friend Joyce took us on an all day tour of Belgrade, Bozeman,
Gardner, Montana and into the Lamar Valley in Yellowstone Park. We got
many of the wildlife photos on the trip. The first photo is the
world's smallest church with six seats. The second photo is the
entrance to Big Sky, Montana, where Mike is currently building an
18,000 square foot vacation home. Joyce and Mike are in the third
photo. And finally the Yellowstone Park Company yellow bus. The
Mattson family visited the park in 1954 by traveling by train to West
Yellowstone, Montana. From there they rode the yellow bus through the
park. It might even be the bus shown below. However, these buses
ceased to be used in 1957. Today, private individuals own several of
these buses and bring them to the park once a year to tour the park.
We saw plenty of elk. The fella in the fourth photo was standing on a
porch at the park headquarters. These animals are wild but they also
rule the park. They get to go anywhere they want. We also saw mule
deer, pronghorn antelope, a wolf, coyote, bears, elk and bison.
This grizzly put on a great show crossing the Lamar River and romping
up the river bank. The fourth photo is a black bear.
This is our third trip to Yellowstone, a total of 10 days, and we still
have barely scratched the surface. This is the MUST SEE of your
lifetime. Most people only drive the roads. If you take the hiking
trails you could spend your life here (until a bear eats you!).
Next week, off to Idaho to see relatives and to Washington to see the
first friends that we met in San Luis Obispo in 1973.
Love, Pete and Ellen
Photos from Sep 2007