Tuesday, August 30, 2011

FTJ, Entry 113: Big Tetons, and Weeping in Wapiti

RV During our stay in West Yellowstone, MT, we took a day trip south to Wyoming's Grand Teton National Park. I have run out of adjectives for now.

To save you (and me) time, I give you Grand Teton National Park in pictures:




Beautiful Jackson Lake.










Moved to Tears

And then the trip from West Yellowstone, MT, to Cody, Wyoming. The Wapiti Valley is unlike anything we have every seen. We both were awestruck. In fact, I cried the entire time, I was so moved by the vistas. Something about this part of Wyoming really touched me -- my reaction was visceral and quite weird. This is a very, very special part of the world.

Photos cannot really come close to portraying the beauty of this journey, but here are some to give you just a very small sampling of what we saw...



 



 



We are now in Cody -- and we love it so much we extended our stay. Our latest favorite place. 

God, Wyoming is amazing.

Tanks, Panky



Sunday, August 28, 2011

FTJ, Entry 112: Geyser Gawking: The Yellowstone Experience

First, we want to send our love and concern to our friends and family who are in the path of Hurricane/Tropical Storm Irene. We are thinking of you and wish we could be there to help or provide support. It is a helpless feeling hearing about the storm from across the country. So we are crossing fingers and toes and whatever else. Keep in touch and PLEASE let us know how you are. All our best.

(Compared to what you are all experiencing or about to experience, I am a bit sheepish about this blog -- it seems so trivial. But maybe it can be an after-the-storm diversion.)
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We just left West Yellowstone, Montana and Yellowstone National Park. Yellowstone was immense, fascinating, wonderful -- and oddly disappointing. The geyser fields and scenery were mind blowing, but we wanted more fauna, dammit. You have seen those photos and videos of cars stopped on the roads in Yellowstone, to allow herds of bison or bears or deer or moose across? Well, we didn't see any of that. We swore we kept seeing one bison -- we named him Barry/Bob/Bill (whatever moved us at the time) -- five different times. He was always right alongside the road. We figured that maybe he just makes appearances throughout the park, like a roving entertainer. 

Eventually, as we left the park and headed east, we discovered where the buffalo roam -- we saw big herds in a grand expanse of yellow rolling meadow toward the east entrance of the park.

The best sight, and the first wildlife we encountered during our visit, was a coyote hunting in a meadow. Very exciting for us, in that neither of us had ever seen a coyote in the wild before. The next-best experience was a moose (again, the first ever for both of us), but it was about a half mile away. We could only see him with the binoculars. He was a young bull, antlers just blooming and still in velvet.

Coyote cutie. Probably hunting mice.
A bald eagle from afar. This is the best I could do with our zoom.
Barry/Bill/Bob the bison, along the road, moving on to his next appearance in the park.

Found the rest of the herd, finally.

Is bison poop in a geyser field an oddity? I think so.
Beyond these sightings, we saw only small herds of elk, one deer, and two chipmunks. No bears, no wolves, no nuttin else. Bummer.

But the geysers and fumaroles and other geologic wonders were just that...wonders. Yellowstone, basically a collapsed caldera, sitting on one of the largest supervolcanoes in the world, has more geysers than anywhere else on earth. On earth, my friends. And we saw a lot of them, including, of course, Old Faithful. (For email readers, please go to our blog for a video of a geyser hissing and bubbling.)


 


We almost decided to skip Old Faithful, but then figured we had to see it. It was impressive, but surprisingly, not that much more so than the Old Faithful geyser we witnessed in Calistoga, CA.


 Below, photos of various other sights of Yellowstone:
I think this was Midway Geyser Basin.
 

There are geysers below and above the surface of Yellowstone Lake. The lake is huge -- and gorgeous.
 
Typical sight as you drive through the park -- steam.
One view of Mammoth Hot Springs. Amazing.
The colors in the geyser fields ranged from brilliant cerulean blue to rich orange and copper. Stunning.
 
Mammoth Hot Springs walkway.
One view of The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone.
 

Too many photos of me in this blog. Behind me, the incredible Lower Falls.
Upper Falls in the Grand Canyon.

Beau had to try his hand at fly fishing in one of the park rivers, the Gibbon. He caught only a small creek chubb, whatever the hell that is. He did have several bites from trout, but none landed.
The park, most of which is in Wyoming, averages 8,000 feet in altitude. The Continental Divide snakes through it. We must have crossed the Divide, in various places, at least seven times. Had to commemorate it.

OMG - We Actually Went Whitewater Rafting
I stole these photos of our rafting experience on the Gallatin River from the Geyser Whitewater Expedition site (thus the "proof" labels). We took a trip with them out of Big Sky, Montana. I still cannot believe I did this. I am terrified of drowning. But I have to say, it was a BLAST for both of us, and I would do it again in a minute. These were only Class II and III rapids, but for our first time, they were perfect.

They put the old hefty folks (us) up front for ballast, I guess. We got drenched. Thank god for wetsuits.

The water was 50 degrees.

We are crazy old loons.
A Baby Rodeo 

(Again, for email readers, please go to our blog for a video of the rodeo we attended in West Yellowstone -- pretty cool.)


A few blurry photos of the rodeo experience:




The little dog beside the horse is a bull wrangler. He makes sure the gigantic bulls return to the stalls after throwing and stomping the cowboys. It was scary watching him work, right under the bulls' hooves.

Next posting we will include photos of the towering Grand Tetons in Teton National Park. Yet another awesome spectacle we have been privileged to enjoy.

Tanks, Panky


Wednesday, August 24, 2011

FTJ, Entry 111: Magnificent Montana, Part Two

It's obvious we loved Polson, Montana, in that we are devoting another blog entry to our time there. 

One thing we left out of our blog on the Polson Motorcoach RV resort -- it sat above a small airport. Every day we got to watch small prop planes and jets come and go. It definitely added to the great experience. We didn't get photos of the planes (which does not make sense, since I tend to take photos of practically every stupid thing we see on this trip) -- AARGH. 

Anyway, we wanted to share a few more images of our time in Polson and nearby towns.

Have you ever? Stunning.

The prominent gray streak in my hair is getting weirder. I am beginning to look like a skunk. That is Flathead Lake in the far distance.

An osprey over the lake.


Hard to see, but there is a dust devil in the sky. It started on the ground,
then rose up and eventually broke apart.
Loved the gate to this ranch. Kind of wish I could be a ranch owner.

The Land of Trading Posts..and dead things

In that much of the area is an indian reservation, there were a number of trading posts scattered around. Each had a lot of dead animals on display, much to my chagrin.

The trading posts have a disturbing number of pelts. Hunting is a very big thing here. Unfortunately.
Oddities abound in these places.
Museums -- the Weird and the Wonderful

Never in our lives have we ever seen anything like The Miracle of America Museum. Kind of blows your mind. It encompasses more than 5 acres and 60 buildings (well, in many cases calling them "buildings" is generous). There is so much STUFF in this place, it is overwhelming. I actually think my brain imploded. Many people would call it a giant junk shop, but there are gems here and there, and some awesome displays of our history. 

Some of the stuff makes sense; other stuff, well, it is beyond explanation.

 
A beautiful old Packard.

It is difficult to portray how crazy this place is. Crazy and charming and fascinating, all at once.

Clockwise from the top: Some of the museum buildings, Beau with I am not sure what; me with a flying monkey statue, I guess commemorating the Wizard of Oz; and just a fraction of the outdoor vehicle displays.


Beau is understandably perplexed as to the displays, the junk, their meaning, and what to see next.

Love the backward gun.

Beau made me take this, saying these would return me to "my people."
 
Barbara and Robert -- the museum offered some real candidates for your next camper:
 
The top photo is a pop up camper from the 1920s.

We also visited a very beautifully executed museum in Charlo, MT -- the Ninepipes Museum of Early Montana. The hundreds of artifacts and old photos were fascinating.

The gentleman who curates the museum devoted a number of the exhibits to his dad, who was a famous outdoorsman in Montana. Some of his adventures tracking and hunting grizzly bear and other wild animals were published in Outdoor Life magazine.

There were numerous exquisite exhibits of Native American clothing and weaponry. I loved the elaborate beadwork on the garments, and the beautiful headdresses, war vests, pipes, weaponry, and other items from the old West.

 




Boy oh boy, were we sad to leave this area.

Big Sky Country at sunset again.


On to Yellowstone National Park.

Tanks, Panky