Category Archives: Places we Visit-Year 1

(locations align with the map showing our route)

The Grand Tetons!

We took a day while staying near Yellowstone and drove down to the Grand Teton National Park.  It’s just south of Yellowstone, and was a real pretty drive.  We drove down the east side of the mountain range and drove back up the west side, so we got photos from all different angles.  Here are two shots, first from the east and then from the west:

Here are more photos we took of this unique and beautiful mountain range:

Grizzly Resource Center – with wolves and eagles too!

We finally saw a grizzly, but it was in the local Resource Center which is like a zoo.  They have several grizzlies that were abandoned when babies or were considered “nuisance bears” (they like garbage too much and won’t stay away from populated areas).  They let them out of their cages into the big outdoor area two or three at a time throughout the day so they get some exercise and we can see them.  There were 3 out while we were there, two were siblings and played together a lot and the third just hung out laying around.  We got some great shots of them!

The Resource Center also has several wolves; because it was a cold day (around 38) they mostly laid in the sun and slept.  We got some good shots of one who sat up and then got up and walked around a little before curling up and going back to sleep.

The center also has eagles, of their 3 bald eagles one had a wing amputated after he was shot, and one had neurological damage and really acted strangely!  But, they are beautiful creatures!  They also have 2 golden eagles and a large owl.  The eagles and owl are in fairly small aviaries and it was sad to see they can’t really fly in that small space so they end up sitting on a branch all day.

Here are some pictures we took at the center:

We visited the Grand Canyon…at Yellowstone!

Did you know that there is a huge canyon at Yellowstone that is called the “Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone”?  We didn’t.  We visited it yesterday and it’s VERY impressive!  The Yellowstone River runs through it and has carved it over a long time.  There are two waterfalls at the beginning of the canyon and there are several viewpoints to see the beautiful formations and colors along the canyon.  Several of the viewpoints are down 800+ steps…and since we were at 8,000ft already Jeff and I decided not to attempt those.  We were out of breath just walking on level ground!

In the photo just below, notice the large white area on the cliff – it’s a shelf of snow!  At this altitude there was still some snow on the ground as well!

At one viewpoint a man was sitting with a large telephoto camera and was looking through it and then taking notes.  We discovered he was studying an Osprey in a nest high on the tip of a formation.  We got a fairly good photo of it with our telephoto lens and it’s included in the set of photos below.

We also saw a mud volcano and sulphur caldron – boy was it stinky!!!  The yellow coloring around several of the pits is pure sulphur.

And, while driving through a meadow we saw a couple of elk, both with nice antlers.  Got a couple of pictures of them.   We again saw lots of bison and at one place a ranger was directing traffic around a big male who was walking right in the middle of the street!  But, we have tons of bison photos so we didn’t hold up traffic this time 🙂

Here are some photos:

Another trip into Yellowstone – Mammoth Hot Springs and more animals (and our first bear sighting)

We took another trip into Yellowstone (we’re here for a month so we’ll be going into the park many times) and on this trip we saw even more geysers as well as Mammoth Hot Springs.  Mammoth Hot Springs is a weirdly beautiful place.  The formations look a lot like what we’ve seen in caves.  They were formed by hot springs up the side of a large hill that spewed out chemicals such as calcite that flowed down over the hillside, sometimes forming pools and then overflowing to form terraces.

We also saw a black bear – it was a ways down a hill so we didn’t have a close encounter but I have a couple of pictures of it.

We almost saw a grizzly too – we rounded a bend in the road and saw lots of people stopped at the side of the road with cameras and binoculars out. We asked what they were looking at since we didn’t see anything and were told a grizzly had just crossed a meadow but was out of view now.  Darn!  We also saw more elk and antelope…and we saw lots of bison again but we have so many photos of them we didn’t take anymore.  We laughed at people who were stopped at the road to take telephoto photos of one bison way on the other side of a meadow and wanted to tell them “Hey, head south over to the meadows near Old Faithful – there are HUGE herds with babies all over the roads down there!”  But, we didn’t.

Here are pictures from this trip:

Another trip into Yellowstone – focusing on seeing the many geysers and springs

A lot of people may think that ‘geyser’ and ‘Yellowstone’ means Old Faithful.  But there are DOZENS of geysers and hot springs and mudpots in Yellowstone.  We spent a day walking around amongst them and were really impressed!

Here are some videos I shot:
geyser spouting: click here
geyser bubbling low: click here
steaming lake with bubbling geyser in it: click here
steaming hot waterfall: click here
bubbling modpot with a fumarole (steamvent) in the background (hey, that hissing sound in the video is the fumarole!: click here

While there we saw more bison in and near the road, and we saw more elk as well!  Here are pictures of the geysers and springs as well as bison and elk:

Earthquake Lake – a lake formed in 1959 when a 7.5 earthquake struck

Not too far from West Yellowstone is a lake that was formed in 1959 when a 7.5 earthquake caused a massive landslide that blocked a river and killed 28 people who were camping in a campground right in the path of the landslide.

On the way we saw some beautiful scenery, and at a bend in the road where there was a very steep cliff along the road we saw a group of mountain sheep with some babies.  Very cute!

Here are some pictures we took:

Yellowstone – first trip into the park

We’ll be here at Yellowstone for a few weeks, so we’ll have plenty of time to take pictures.  On just our first trip into the park we saw lots of bison and a couple of elk, saw Old Faithful erupt, and saw lots of beautiful scenery!

My favorite pictures from today:

And here’s a video I took of the entire Old Faithful eruption: (click here)

And here are a bunch more!

Craters of the Moon – a volcanic landscape like nowhere else!

While staying in Idaho Falls we took a drive over to an area known as Craters of the Moon.  It’s an area where there were volcanic eruptions and lava flows every 2,000 years or so from about 16,000 years ago to the latest about 2,100 years ago.  The area contains cinder cones (large conical hills made of black or red cinder rocks), spatter cones (small cones between 10-20 feet high and fairly vertical made of lava that spatters straight up and falls back onto a small area), lava flows and cinder fields.  It’s very interesting to walk among the volcanic material and see all the shapes, flows and colors – in addition to the most common black and fairly common red, there area also areas of blue lava!

A large swath of Idaho following the path of the Snake River is known as the Great Rift, which has seen lots of volcanic activity for thousands of years.  The volcanic activity over these thousands of years has moved northeast and currently Yellowstone is the ‘hot spot’ in the Great Rift.

Here are pictures we took while at the Craters of the Moon:

Dogwood – I’ve never seen it before we headed to northern Ca

 

As we drive through forests and meadows here in northern CA and southern OR in spring, one type of tree we see often is a dogwood.  In some places they line the roads and are all in bloom.

They are really pretty trees and the white flowers contrast so nicely with the shades of green of the other trees.

We see these trees at altitudes of between 3000 and 4500 feet up, and they only bloom if they are in the sunlight.

We also took close-up shots of another little wildflower and a manzanita in bloom: