Browsing Posts tagged bison

Roadtrip Pictures

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I posted daily during the roadtrip, but you never got to see any pictures! We’ve ordered them and made an album, but in case you don’t come over to look at it, here are a few of my favorites.


This is somewhere near the Idaho/Wyoming border heading to the Grand Tetons. Beautiful hills covered in wheat!


This is at one of the lakes in the Grand Teton National Park.


This is at the West Thumb in Yellowstone, one of the many hot springs. I love the colors.

So I don’t break the frontpage of the Blarg, you have to click the link after this to see the rest.

continue reading…

Day 7: Yellowstone

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We spent the whole day today in Yellowstone visiting parts we didn’t reach yesterday. The exciting part today was the Bison!

We drove a stretch of road around dusk that was crazy with Bison. They even crossed the road right by our car, and it got a little scary actually. A deer right by the car isn’t too scary, but when the largest terrestrial mammal in North America is about 5 feet from your car, that started to worry me a little. Luckily they continued by without incident. :)

Tomorrow is a long day to Spokane, WA, about 460 miles.

Today we drove from the Grand Tetons to Yellowstone and got here around noon. Now Yellowstone is a BIG place. It’s 63 miles by 54 miles, so moving from one place to another takes a long time. Today we visited Old Faithful and a few other geothermal locations. Some of them bubble, some come in pretty colors, and some steam and smell really nasty. Old Faithful was really neat though. It “erupts” about every 90 minutes. Big crowds of people gather and wait for the show. We saw a lot of deer today, but the moose was still way cooler.

Another interesting fact about the park is that there are a ton of dead trees lying on the ground. In some places there are so many they look like big pick-up sticks. Now having paid attention in biology, I know that bacteria and fungi and all that jazz help decay stuff like dead trees. So why all the dead trees? Because it’s too cold for those microbes to survive, and thus, little decaying. Instead the trees become fuel for fires. There was a really big fire in 1988 that we read about at the visitor center.

Tomorrow we plan on seeing the northern part of Yellowstone. We saw a bison today from REALLY far away, but I’m crossing my fingers we get a better view tomorrow.

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