Utah to Colorado to New Mexico – Day 5

Roadside in New Mexico

The Puebloans built something a thousand years ago over at Chaco Culture, and it’s standing up better than what my ancestors built 100 years ago.

Roadside in New Mexico

Then there’s nature that, with great fidelity, keeps duplicating the plants and animals along with the conditions that support the life found on our planet, except we humans who are part of this force are using our “intellect” to crush those systems where we can.

Roadside in New Mexico

Oh, look, it’s a spotted cucumber beetle.

Roadside in New Mexico

Welcome to Doodle Dum, as it has been named by its most recent inhabitant, Cassie Hobbs. This somewhat peculiar home in Chloride, New Mexico, was built in 1921 by Austin Crawford who designed it to withstand the hail god was going to send to earth. Fortunately for Mr. Crawford, that day never came, but the town of Chloride started to disappear off the map until nothing much more than a ghost town existed. This remote corner was certainly worth a visit, we only wish the Pioneer Store Museum had been open while we were in the area.

Roadside in New Mexico

This promised to be a vast stretch of nature untouched by humans aside from the road that is cutting through it; hopefully, we’ll have enough gas. Just up the road, and lucky for us, not 100 miles up the road, there was a crew doing road repairs and said the road ahead was impassable. Well, that changed our plans of heading back to Arizona via this mountain route on Highway 52.

Roadside in New Mexico

So instead, we turn around and aim for the 152 West.

Roadside in New Mexico

This isn’t bad, and there’s a detour ahead we can take.

Gila River in New Mexico

Lake Roberts is a nice lush corner of New Mexico, but we’re just passing through.

Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

Our destination is the Gila Cliff Dwellings, which are part of the National Monument that bears their name. These homes were part of the Mogollon People’s lands that started just north of here and included most of the Mexican state of Chihuahua. Like so many other tribes of the Southwest, they abandoned their place here next to the Gila River and moved on.

Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

Oral tradition among tribes, including the Acoma, Hopi, and Zuni, says the Mogollon integrated into their societies.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument in New Mexico

It’s great that these are now protected lands, but one hundred years ago, they were being pillaged by hunters, farmers, and people collecting artifacts, including human remains in the form of mummies. Caroline and I are leaving with memories of one of the more remote parks in the U.S. National Park system.

Caroline Wise standing in the Gila River in New Mexico

Of course, Caroline had to doff her shoes and roll up her pants before stepping into the waters of the Gila River. One day, I’ll have to compile a list of how many of America’s major bodies of water and waterways she has dipped her toes into.

Pinos Altos, New Mexico

Our last stop before finally driving home on this five-day journey into the Southwest is in Pinos Altos, New Mexico. Someone we know hails from this small town that is trying to become a ghost town these days with a population of a couple of hundred, down from about 9,000 back in the 1880s when gold was being mined in the area.

Arizona state sign

What kind of people drive by a state sign and have to stop to shoot it? Maybe people like us in some way who have to stop and shoot it with a camera, a way of saying, “I’ve been here.”

Utah to Colorado to New Mexico – Day 4

White horse next to a dirt road in New Mexico

This is how mythologies are made. Yesterday we helped a runaway horse by preventing it from reentering the highway and looking for its owners. This morning, on our way down to Chaco Culture, we spotted this white horse on a rise next to a dirt road. It was as though the spirit of the white horse came out to greet us at the break of day to let us know it was looking over us as we’d looked out for one of theirs.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

The sun is fully over the horizon by the time we reach the park boundary and start our third visit to Chaco Culture National Historical Park and World Heritage Site. Our previous visits were both back in the year 2000 around the same time of year; click here for the first one and click here for the one a month later where we just had to share this with my mother-in-law, Jutta.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

Someday, we’ll hopefully pay that rock known as Fajada Butte out there a visit and explore the mystery of the Anasazi Sun Dagger. Today, though, we are heading up to a different location.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

Is this ruin smiling at us?

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

There’s a narrow crack in the cliffside that is the original footpath leading from above to below and vice versa and was used by the earliest visitors to this outpost. Today, we made the time to crawl up through in order to gain this view of Pueblo Bonito.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

Thank you to everyone polite enough not to scavenge the artifacts that allow us to have a visit of discovery where surprises abound.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

We explored more of the plateau, but how many photos should I post? We are on our way back down.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

Buried in the sandstone cliffs are reminders that while you may think you are in a desert, the land you walk upon was once seafloor.

Chaco Culture National Historic Park in New Mexico

Chaco is an incredible place well off the beaten path and certainly deserves to be a World Heritage Site. There are many things we do not know about this complex of ancient buildings, but I’m thrilled that there are people working to preserve what is here. The Puebloans obviously have a rich history that is practically invisible to us modern inhabitants of their ancestral lands. When will our culture evolve to a point of maturity that allows the Native Americans of North America to trust us?

Wandering horses in New Mexico

More horses. For some reason or other, horses lend a kind of confidence about a place. They make it more welcoming. Maybe it has to do with the idea that if a horse can live on these lands, then how harsh can this place be?

Jay's Liquors in New Mexico

I could take a photo of this building ten more times, and still, I won’t tire of being welcomed to uranium country by a liquor store.

Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico

Visiting Acoma Pueblo, also known as Sky City, requires everyone to join an organized tour, and if you plan on taking photos, you’ll need to buy a special permit. The pace through the pueblo is perfect and never felt rushed. We started the tour in the church, but there was no photography allowed within, and as hard as it was, I was respectful of the tribe’s wishes.

Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico

Pardon me on these next photos, as I ran with a heavy hand full of favorites that I just had to post. I find this place more beautiful and serene than anywhere in Beverly Hills or Santa Fe. I’m under no delusion that there could likely be a high level of poverty and maybe even alcohol or other substance abuse going on, but that can happen everywhere. Maybe the people who live here find survival difficult. I can’t know as I don’t have the luxury of chatting with the inhabitants. From my perspective, which is radically different than the one I would have had from my childhood through my thirties, this sky island is an idyllic paradise.

Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico

What I wouldn’t give to be here a morning when bread was being baked in this hearth and then head over to the edge of the mesa and, while it’s still steaming hot, break it apart and watch the clouds stream by.

Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico

Am I over-romanticizing my perception and casual observations where I imbue these iconic images through the filter of a Western mind that has created a story divorced from reality? Probably. All the same, I’m in love with the utility, simplicity, and place of how it perfectly presents a lifestyle that is as far away from my existence as I could imagine.

Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico

As I said earlier, the location is idyllic.

Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico

This nearly presented me with a dilemma as you are required to seek permission to take anyone’s photo. This was the second shot I was snapping of these houses and I was snapping the image before I could recognize that a young man was leaving his home. Had he asked if I’d taken his photo and then requested for me to remove it, I would have obliged, but he seemed to shrug it off, and we both continued on our ways.

Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico

When the guided tour was over, we were welcomed to leave on the road that John Wayne once demanded be carved here while he was working on a film, or we could take the historic route. We opted for the historic route so we could delay the point we had to leave. The narrow trail between some large rocks is well worn, and in some spots, there are toe- and handholds to climb up the rock, and in others, there are stairs as seen on the right of this photo.

Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico

Every corral should be so beautiful.

El Malpais National Monument in New Mexico

A quick stop into El Malpais National Monument to admire the lava flows and arches before heading to Socorro for an overnight.

El Camino Family Restaurant in Socorro, New Mexico

Yep, this is why we are staying in Socorro. Two meals at the El Camino Family Restaurant can’t be beat, even if we eat the exact same thing for dinner and breakfast the next morning. I’m telling you that you are setting a trend with having guacamole for breakfast along with green chili and cheese-smothered steak with beans.

Utah to Colorado to New Mexico – Day 3

The road we are taking to Lake City, Colorado, out of Gunnison, follows the braided Gunnison River as we leave town before the sun comes up.

While I could say that I’d love to drive in these mountains every day, I’d be lying because as soon as a flake of snow falls, I’d be wishing to be in Arizona sitting in shorts on a winter day having an iced tea, wishing to be somewhere it’s snowing.

I’m a sucker for barns set in idyllic locations where I could imagine living as a cow, not a steer for slaughter, but a friendly cow that wasn’t being milked by a mechanical octopus sucking the life out of me. My name would be Bessie, of course.

You can bet a dollar we took this route for this reason right here. Alfred Packer ate people on this spot one hundred twenty-nine years ago, and I’d guess he did it with gusto because if you are going cannibal, I don’t believe you pussyfoot into something this serious. You toss the bib and ketchup to the side and hold on tight while you start chewing on another man’s face and armpit; gotta start with the tender spots, right? Sadly, I can’t report that there was any draw to be pulled into that kind of madness as others report when visiting Niagara Falls and say they feel drawn by the water.

Out of gruesome pilgrimage, we return you to blatant scenes of profound beauty where primitive fences lead into wooded areas bordering small idyllic lakes in a valley surrounded by mountains while fluffy clouds dance along the edges.

Looks to be on the shallow side for kayaking, canoeing, or rafting, though who am I to judge such things?

Wildflowers, mountains, and dunes are not something you expect to see every day.

While the Great Sand Dunes National Monument has been authorized to become a National Park with an expansion of its lands a few years ago, it’s awaiting approval from Congress. Next time we visit, hopefully, we’ll be able to brag that we’d been here back when it was a wee monument.

There are at least six people in this photo; can you find them? The mountains in the background are the  Sangre de Cristo Range, which extends down into New Mexico and represents the end of the Rockies.

A road trip to consider would take us from Santa Fe at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo Range right up to Toad River in British Columbia, Canada. With this trip, we will see the extent of the Rocky Mountains with our own eyes; sounds like a plan.

During sunrise and sunset, those mountain peaks look red in the “alpenglow” hence their name that translates to Blood of the Christ – Sangre de Cristo.

Trillions of treasures for the eye likely exist distributed throughout these mountains; we see a few dozen and are somehow satisfied. Oh yeah, this just happens to be Treasure Falls in the Pagosa Springs area of Colorado, should you be wondering.

This horse left her pasture, and her hooves failed her on the asphalt; down she went with some road rash for her desire to explore the larger world. We’d seen her go over the fence as her companions running with ferocity approached the edge of the property, so while Caroline kept her company and reassured her that we’d find someone to bring her safely back to the fold, I went onto the property to get the owner’s attention. Back she went to the nervous herd that had been anxiously standing by, and we drove off happy that this beautiful white horse hadn’t been hit by a passing car.

Tonight’s sleeping adventure is being brought to us courtesy of Aztec, New Mexico, over in the Four Corners region. Time for some desert exploration.

Utah to Colorado to New Mexico – Day 2

Gooseneck State Park in Utah

This is the “other” horseshoe. One is found down by Page, Arizona, and has the Colorado River flowing through it. This one is found in Gooseneck State Park in Utah and has the San Juan River running through it, though it ends up flowing into the Colorado River over at Lake Powell.

North of Mexican Hat, Utah

This is a brilliant example of desert skies where looking in one direction, the horizon has a foreboding gloom portending bad weather out there. A few minutes later, and looking in another direction, you get the following.

Near the Mokee Dugway in Utah

Heading up the Mokee Dugway all of a sudden, the day is perfect again with an inviting sky of fluffy clouds.

Mokee Dugway in Southern Utah

This narrow dirt road gives you a better idea of what exactly the Mokee Dugway is and why we tend to want to avoid it in bad weather.

Caroline Wise and John Wise on the Mokee Dugway in Southern Utah

So far, the new car is a pleasure and is getting us where we want to go.

Church Rock in Utah

This is the kind of church Caroline and I can get into. Welcome to Church Rock near the turnoff for Canyonlands National Park.

Canyonlands National Park in Utah

Wow, this is quite the canyon. No wonder Edward Abbey warned of careless travel in the Maze that’s somewhere out there. To be clear, this is the Needles Overlook in Canyonlands National Park, and today’s visit will not do it justice, but that’s kind of our way of having first encounters with many places in America.

Canyonlands National Park in Utah

We are here at the Minor Overlook too late in the day for a giant diversion from where we are planning on staying tonight, but if we had the time and we are so very tempted to make that time, we’d hike right out to the confluence of the Green and Colorado rivers.

Canyonlands National Park in Utah

Canyonlands is certainly a relatively unknown treasure, probably because of the difficulty in visiting the place and not having very many services nearby aside from Moab further north. This particular view is from the Anticline Overlook.

Caroline Wise and Horses in Colorado

Red rock to green grass is the visual indicator that we’ve gone east and are now in Colorado.

Metal Grasshopper Roadside in Norwood, Colorado

The mutant steel grasshoppers of Norwood, Colorado, are not coming to a town near you because they’ve not been robotized – yet.

On the road outside Ridgeway, Colorado looking towards Ouray or Telluride

We’ve been to Ouray and Telluride on the other side of those mountains, but this is the first time on this side.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at the Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park in Colorado

We made it. The Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park was a bit of a mystery to us as we never heard it referenced. No one has ever told us we should visit, and I can’t think of any movies that featured it as a backdrop, such as Monument Valley which has been used many times.

Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park in Colorado

Check out all that metamorphic rock. It’s a curiosity to me that this rock that is over 1.5 billion years old and maybe as striking is the fact that we are at nearly 8,000 feet in elevation (2,400 meters), and these formerly igneous and sedimentary rocks were at one time approximately 8 miles below sea level (12.8 km). Now, here we are, gazing across the canyon at the sloping mountainside that has a gaping chasm torn into it, looking like pasture lands go right up to the edge as though this was opened yesterday.

Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park in Colorado

I wonder how many others, when thinking of the Rockies, picture the mountains west of Denver and consider that’s about it. We are still in the Rocky Mountains, although we are 200 miles from Denver. They continue south to the Sangre de Christo Mountains for at least another 250 miles and north towards Toad River, Canada, for another 2,179 miles.

Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park in Colorado

Isn’t that some nice shit? Oops, I mean gneiss and schist. Their story is a romantic entanglement that began long, long ago in a time far away. While they started life as sand, sediment, and volcanic rock, they grew up until, during their long hibernation, under great pressure, the gneiss, hot and cooking away to change its molecular structure, was not as hot and fluid as the schist that was able to flow and cut into the gneiss. Hundreds of millions of years will pass before they reappear for their unveiling as a couple forever intertwined as one until, once again, they return to the sands of time long after we depart from this world.

Caroline Wise standing in the Gunnison River in Colorado

Standing in the Gunnison River because a corner of Winslow, Arizona, is not nearby.

Somewhere near Gunnison, Colorado at Sunset

We are spending the night in Gunnison. Nothing left to report about this day, end of transmission.

Glacier to Yellowstone – Day 5

Sunrise near Green River, Wyoming

Who among us has never seen a sunrise such as this? To be out West in the mountainous terrain of a place away from cities where a slight rise in elevation can offer us views that stretch for nearly 50 miles is a luxury I suppose few will ever experience firsthand. That rareness should stay with us and not be taken for granted; after all, it was only Caroline and me who were in this location at this particular moment where the sun and clouds would only appear to us in this exact configuration and never again in millions of years could this scene ever be duplicated.

Flaming Gorge National Recreation Area in Utah

The sun crawls higher, and we drive further south through the Flaming Gorge of Northern Utah. We started the day at 5:30, which means it was only 4:30 in Arizona, where we are headed, but with 860 miles (1,375 km) ahead of us, we’ll need all the psychological help we can find to believe we are getting home at a reasonable hour.

Flaming Gorge National Recreation Area in Utah

It’s Monday, but it may as well be some anonymous day a couple of hundred thousand years ago where no sign of humanity can be seen across the landscape. No power lines, no contrails, and no skyline in the distance. For a moment, one should find such a place, sit down, and meditate on the idea of being the first human ever to be looking out with the recognition that you might be the first sentient being ever to gaze upon the soil and into the sky with an entire future ahead of yourself and how you might want to shape your path.

Dandelion in Utah

A wish, okay, so it’s a dandelion, and maybe I’m “too old” to play such things, but so what? I wish to see a dinosaur.

Dinosaur National Monument in Utah

Wish granted here at the Dinosaur National Monument in Utah and Colorado. Millions of years ago, a river ran through the area, and with it, dead dinosaurs would drift downstream to be buried beneath the accumulating sediments.

Dinosaur National Monument in Utah

This upturned river bed is the main attraction of the park. Look at the picture above this one, and you can see that the building was placed directly over the riverbed that now sits at a nearly 90-degree angle.

Dinosaur National Monument in Utah

There’s a whole lot of wow factor for kids of all ages who come to gawk at dinosaur bones.

Caroline Wise and John Wise on the Colorado State Line

Because the road isn’t long enough already, we opt for a slight detour through Western Colorado to see what things look like out this way.

Loma, Colorado

A beautiful old and abandoned school built in the early 1900s. Nothing really significant about it; it was just nice to look at.

Near Moab, Utah on the Colorado River

Scenes hinting at getting close to home. These kids are playing on a sandbank in the Colorado River on the outskirts of Moab, Utah.

Hole In The Rock on U.S. Highway 191 in Utah

Hole N” The Rock still isn’t being visited, though it was just this past September that I was saying that someday we need to stop here. Maybe next year.

Newspaper Rock State Historical Monument in Utah

Seems like yesterday that we were here and not three years ago, but it was another September trip into the area back in the year 2000 that we first laid our eyes on this incredible panel of petroglyphs.

Cow Canyon Trading Post in Bluff, Utah

Fond memories of a great dinner will forever stay with us from that night years ago when we stayed in Bluff and walked over for a brilliant Native American meal.

Mexican Hat, Utah

Caroline blurts out, “….the layers” every time we pass this.

Mexican Hat, Utah

This is why the tiny community of Mexican Hat, Utah, is called Mexican Hat.

Mexican Hat, Utah

This sight had me thinking “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” thoughts for a moment, but I reassured myself and Caroline that the black cloth draped over his face offered up some protection against the bugs that would otherwise splatter on his face. By the way, we are in Mexican Hat proper, and if the Mexican Hat Lodge swinging BBQ was working at this time of day, I wouldn’t care what time we’d get home; I’d be eating a ribeye right about now.

Monument Valley in Utah on the Arizona border

We are just about to pass back into Arizona to finish our drive home, and this final glance at Monument Valley will be the last photo of the day and of this five-day race to the Canadian border and back. Though we spent a considerable amount of time in the car, we gained thousands of indelible impressions that work to cement our memories of how beautiful the wildlands of this country are. We arrived home an hour before midnight after driving 3,147 miles (5,078 km), dragged what we could upstairs, and instead of falling immediately to sleep, we checked out some of the photos from the trip. This has been a great way to celebrate Independence Day in America.

Glacier to Yellowstone – Day 4

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

It’s barely daybreak at 5:50 in the morning, but we know the value of every minute today. We must look forward to tomorrow when we need to get home. This plays a large role in how long we get to spend in Yellowstone, as we need to position ourselves tonight in a place where we can drive home tomorrow. At the moment, we are about 1,000 miles from home, and while consideration for those parameters is under consideration, we will do our best to remain in the moment and yet aware of the time.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

As I said, we were entering the park shortly after daybreak. Sunrise was right here at the Canary Springs on the terrace near where we dropped in last night for sunset. The boardwalk trail we had walked a few years earlier has been subsumed and is now impassable as it is disappearing below the limestone crust.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

In some areas, the color of the travertine has faded, and it seems the water is flowing in new areas, while in others, it has stopped. I think it was during our last visit we started learning about the hydrology of the ground below us and how the combination of a heat source close to the surface combined with an ample water supply to cook up a soup of minerals whose flow keeps shifting while the minerals that make up the travertine accumulate and also change the shape and openings of the natural pipes below. Depending on snowfall, rain, and earth movement caused by earthquakes it very well may be that the features of Yellowstone not only change from year to year but from season to season.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

We’d like to stop everywhere that looks familiar to get off the road and explore further than we have on previous visits, but with about 10 hours allocated for this part of the adventure instead of 3 to 5 days, we have to limit ourselves.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

So, you think this looks the same as it did so many years ago? Do the trees look taller, and can you tell how the forest is recovering from the fire of 1988? Come to think of it, when we were first here it was the beginning of the season in springtime when we visited with Ruby and Axel and then at the close of the season during the fall with my mother-in-law Jutta. Here, at the height of summer, I’d venture to say that the greens are greener and the blues bluer.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

To say we are excited to see all of this again should be obvious; what is not so obvious is our surprise at how amazing it all is. There are times we wonder if we’ll enjoy a place on subsequent visits as much as we did on our first or second stop, but seemingly without fail, we are as delighted as we were the first time. Matter of fact our familiarity starts to feel as though we are visiting an old friend who is happy to greet us.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Someday I hope to have all of these photos sorted algorithmically by visual data so I might learn better what exactly it is in these images that is common and if there’s a theme that I cannot see on glancing over them. Then I have to wonder about a man by himself looking into this cauldron of boiling water and steam: what is he seeing and experiencing? I get to squeeze Caroline’s hand and constantly reiterate how amazed I am, and she does the same back at me, but he doesn’t have anyone to share the experience being had at the moment. I can’t say one way or the other is more or less valid, but I do know that with the two of us sharing these days, we have each other to help fill the memory gaps that time and distance create.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

I should probably check my older photos, but I do think that there was a lot more steam obscuring the view of Excelsior Crater here at Midway Geyser Basin on our previous visits.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Looking at Grand Prismatic, it became certain that the view is a lot clearer today. Funny, but it seems like the hillside behind this hot spring is taking forever to start recovering from the fire. I hope we have yet another opportunity in the future to come back to Yellowstone and once again measure where things are in this national treasure.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

From where heads are pointed, it would seem that only the view of the Grand Prismatic behind me and the Excelsior Crater in front of me were worth taking in, meaning that this view in between feels neglected. Nothing should be passed by in Yellowstone, and one should always remember that Old Faithful is not the only thing to see on a visit to America’s first national park.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

The look of rust has more to do with the temperature and chemical composition of these bacterial mats that fan out and away from hot springs and geyser pools.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

We look into the earth in awe.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

For mere moments, we can glimpse a moment in history that has stood mostly still. Evolutionary forces may always be at work, but from our perspective, these things have always been this way, and a kind of timelessness is found.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

The day is not just screaming by. Maybe it’s the familiarity with the place and that we are not trying to commit every detail into our memories but are refreshing things that are back in there somewhere.

Old Faithful Inn at Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

The wonderful Old Faithful Inn looks as beautiful and majestic as always. With the bus out front, it’s almost difficult to witness the passage of time, and it feels like it could just as easily be 1955. I hope to never forget that it was the center-gabled roof above the patio that was the room we stayed in on our first visit to this historic hotel.

Old Faithful Inn at Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

To stay here just one more time, that would be nice.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

We’d been a little nervous about visiting Yellowstone at the height of tourism season out of fear of the large crowds we’d read and heard about, but being here on the Upper Geyser Basin a couple of days after the Fourth of July, things seem pretty calm and uncrowded to us.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Hello, old friends; we are back.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

There was no way we could be in the area and not walk from the Old Faithful Inn across the Upper Geyser Basin up to Morning Glory Pool. Along the way, we got to see Riverside Geyser spouting off.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

We couldn’t have asked for more dramatic skies.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

The astute among you might recognize that we are on our way back to the Old Faithful area.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

The Fishing Cone at West Thumb Geyser Basin is well underwater today; this is our first time seeing it so.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Fractal chaos at its best.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Don’t think I’ll ever be able to take a more iconic photo in Yellowstone, as this one has snow-capped mountains, a lake, blue skies, mom, dad, kid, a hot spring, and a boardwalk.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Already heading back to the car as our time in Yellowstone must come to an end on this short visit.

Oxbow Bend in the Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming

But that doesn’t mean we don’t have a few minutes to spare on our way through the Grand Teton National Park.

Caroline Wise at the Oxbow Bend in the Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming

We are at the Oxbow Bend of the Snake River with Caroline, commemorating the moment with a walk into the waters. It’s already 6:00 p.m. as we leave the Tetons.

Midway Mall in Big Piney, Wyoming

These summer days up north are deceiving due to their length. It’s still unbelievable that we’ll pull over in Green River, Wyoming, in a couple of hours and call it quits on the day so we can get a proper night of sleep. Tomorrow is the long haul home, and we are certainly accumulating a sleep deficit. Our original plans had us driving to Salt Lake City tonight, but after weighing the options and verifying the miles on our map, we decided on the detour. The Flaming Gorge Motel was a bargain at $38 for the night and is also a clue as to why we are detouring.