Driving west to Los Angeles is about all I know of this image; well, that and Ruby and Axel are with us. I should note that these early digital photos got moved around and apparently, a bunch of photos went missing as I cannot find images from July 1st and 2nd, which was Saturday and Sunday before the four of us heading over to Catalina. I’m certain that we did not go back to Arizona for the weekend, but of those days, nothing remains.
Yellowstone – Day 6
When you wake in Mammoth Hot Springs you go out and explore Mammoth Hot Springs because that’s the way we do things.
We were travel noobs when we made this trip, no warm weather clothes, no rain gear, just enthusiasm, and these cheap orange plastic rain ponchos from the gift store that, while they worked, also sucked.
And then it had to go and start snowing.
It’s love.
And mud.
It’s grass, water, and algae.
It’s unidentifiable weird stuff that feels like half-cooked chicken.
And then it’s almost over.
We had to drive back down south through the Tetons once more and through Jackson to make our way to Idaho Falls, Idaho, where we flew in nearly a week ago. The impact this trip had on me cannot be understated, as it was enormous and will continue to affect me well into the future.
Yellowstone – Day 5
On our second full day in Yellowstone, we were greeted by this bison next to the trail on the Old Faithful Basin. So far, we’ve not seen any sign of a large herd of these woolly brown beasts, just a random individual or two wandering around.
Geysers, mud pots, hot springs, fumaroles, and streams are joined by the smell of sulfur and the sounds of escaping steam, boiling mud, rumbling cauldrons, birds, and occasionally falling rain. This is certainly the place to be when one wants their senses fully assaulted by nature.
Impenetrable windows into our earth, these hot springs come with plenty of warnings that to enter one is nearly certain death. To look from the safety of the boardwalk is the preferred way of observing them, but still, the imagination begs to see just below the surface and explore the plumbing that is out of sight.
Yesterday we turned right to circumnavigate the park, but today we went straight ahead at the fork in the road and ended up in Mammoth Hot Springs.
Landed in Idaho, drove to Wyoming, and now we are dipping into Montana at the Roosevelt Arch. President Theodore Roosevelt personally laid down the cornerstone of this entryway back in 1903
Around every corner, there is a sight to see. Nowhere in Yellowstone is one going to encounter disappointment.
In Lamar Valley, we spotted a giant herd of elk on a mountainside, but they were too distant to photograph with this particular camera. No matter because we are enchanted all the same.
Staying up north in Mammoth Hot Springs tonight, where everything is perfect for those willing to see the perfection in all there is.
Yellowstone – Day 4
Yesterday we entered Yellowstone National Park for the first and certainly not last time. This was the beginning of something monumental that was going to have repercussions for the rest of our lives. When we drove into the south entrance towards West Thumb, we stopped to pick up a new National Park Pass. While we were driving up from the Tetons, I was busy bragging about how Caroline and I had likely been to the majority of America’s National Parks and Monuments: all 50. As the new annual pass was handed over to us, we opened it to find a map folded around the card this particular year. On that map was emblazoned in a 60-point font: “389 Ways To Enjoy Your Parks and Monuments.” Uh oh, some quick math suggested that we’d need to live to approximately 130 years old to visit them all.
With that realization and humbled by the magnitude of the endeavor, should we take the idea of seeing the entirety of the park system seriously, the only thing I really knew was that I had to stop bragging about how much we’d already seen. Our morning today started at Old Faithful Inn in a room that we would stay in a couple more times as the years went by. In the picture above, Ruby Rieke and I are under the gable in the center guest room of the Inn’s main house. The magic of staying in that room time and again was that any chance we had to see something about Yellowstone, we were nearly certain to spot the room we’d stayed in.
Enchantment would have been an understatement as to where our hearts and imaginations were leading us. Nature was in a kind of bloom and rawness that once again was taking us deeper into the magic that is found in natural areas. While the quality of these photos will always leave something to be desired, they represent our first impressions of this spectacular place. Of the many photos we took subsequently around America, it would be some of these first shots of Yellowstone we returned to again and again over the following months, as we couldn’t believe we’d been that lucky to visit the world’s first National Park.
While the color of the various hot springs elicited oohs and aahs over these days here, as did so many other things, it was during the months following that I couldn’t get Yellowstone out of my dreams which would draw us back up here during the fall.
There are so many up close and personal encounters that can be had here at Yellowstone that don’t require the visitor to try to capture something of the breadth of the Grand Canyon or as vast as the Pacific Ocean. There are millions of dynamic moments occurring every second that ensure that no matter where one looks, one will see something slightly different than anyone else has ever seen in the same spot.
Our visit is going to be too short, and our desire to see it all will likely never be satisfied. With an uncertainty that we should ever be able to return, we must make every moment in this park the kind of quality time we can never forget. This view is of the Upper Yellowstone Falls.
The expanse of this place is not only large but incredibly diverse. No corner we are exploring gets boring, so we keep going looking for the perfect location to just stop and stay in awe.
Geology and hydrology are hard at work, with the evidence of the caldera we are driving through visible everywhere. How will we ever see everything this park has to offer in a single visit?
Upon seeing a bear, we are complete, as we didn’t think we’d actually spot one. Nor did we believe we’d see wolves, and on that account, we did not. By the way, nobody was disappointed that it was a black bear and not a grizzly because we were having a legitimate nature experience that was just delivering non-stop astonishment.
We’ve circled the park to emerge for our second visit to West Thumb. Probably because this was the first encounter with hot springs, bacterial mats, and fumaroles and then the first place to visit a second time, West Thumb forever holds dear to us as the most romantic corner in the park.
Like petrifying flesh and bone, the bacterial mats are extraordinary to see firsthand. Those you might encounter on one visit may very well be long gone on a subsequent journey into Yellowstone. The environment here is forever changing. Take, for example, the massive fire here in the park back in 1988: evidence of its destruction is nearly everywhere, so vast was the blaze. But just 12 years later, the green is returning in 4 and 5-foot tall trees. A ranger pointed out how lucky we were to see the park with the major loss of trees, as many of the views we enjoyed from the roads had never been seen before: they had been hidden behind a thick layer of trees since the park was founded back on March 1, 1872.
We didn’t waste a minute of available light, and though tired from the intense travel, we just kept going.
We fell in love with this rustic room in Old Faithful Inn, and after sitting in the lobby by the fireplace, we reluctantly headed to it, but still, we weren’t ready to call it quits.
This photo remains one of the strangest images I’ve ever taken of Caroline. While not the most flattering, it is special in that I remember asking her to “Just try to look natural.” This is her idea of looking natural.
About that earlier statement on finding the perfect location, the entirety of Yellowstone is that place. From morning till night, we remained in constant awe.
Yellowstone – Day 3
Axel, Ruby, and Caroline were looking something or other up, I’m guessing Caroline has our birding book with her, but I’m not certain. Though it’s mid-May, the weather is still a bit cold, and we’ve been warned that we could see snow and that Yellowstone has had snow even in summer though it’s not that common.
About this time, the scouting and pointing-themed photos are about to get old.
Moments later, Axel was mauled by a grizzly that snuck up behind him but recognizing that it was about to try eating a sour Kraut, it retreated. We put a bandaid on the claw marks, and by morning he was miraculously healed….or none of this really happened, and I’m just trying to find something to say about Axel posing here on a rock.
We have arrived in Yellowstone National Park on the south end. Wow, we did not expect this much snow, or any snow, to be honest.
We’ve seen this photo in a hundred other locations. If we lose Ruby and nobody knows where she went, someone will volunteer that she’s likely visiting the loo.
This is our first-ever glimpse of a geyser basin; it is the West Thumb Geyser Basin on Yellowstone Lake. We are enchanted.
Close-up view of a hot spring with some boiling mud on the right. While this photo does NO justice to what this is, we are mesmerized by the colors, smells, and reality of what’s going on just below the surface of the ground we are walking on.
We are tempted to walk out to the Fishing Cone, as it’s known, and take a look, but we’ve been warned by signs here at the basin to stay on the paths due to fragile and unstable surfaces and stay out of the hot springs because they can bring death with their scalding waters.
This is the first geyser eruption we would ever witness, but certainly not the last. We are at the Old Faithful Basin.
The sun is starting to get low, which is going to force us indoors to our rather luxurious accommodations.
Coming from just watching Old Faithful geyser doing what it does best, we took a walk around and down a hill to this spot where a bison was a little too close for comfort. At least it was more concerned with foraging than paying attention to us. Our room tonight is the Old Faithful Inn; that place is a work of historic art.
Yellowstone – Day 2
We are driving north on the John D. Rockefeller Jr Memorial Parkway into the Grand Teton National Park.
This is Axel, Ruby, and myself looking for wildlife, though I think Axel is discovering just how fat I am.
While these old digital photos that were saved on floppy disks are of poor quality, I think they still convey how beautiful a place the Grand Tetons National Park is.
This has long been a favorite photo of Caroline and me, as it looks an awful lot like I’ve removed her head and placed it over on her shoulder. We get a good laugh every time it shows up.
Ruby and Axel look much more normal, with their extremities and heads right where they should be.
Later in the day, we are back at Horseshoe Bend, only now we are looking in the opposite direction.
Alright, some wildlife in the form of a moose near the Horseshoe Bend. We’ll be staying the night at Signal Mountain Lodge, right in the national park.