Yellowstone National Park (July 18, 19 and 20) We spent one night in Yellowstone at the Old Faithful Inn and two nights just outside the north entrance at Gardiner. Yellowstone is so spectacular and such a highlight it deserves a section all to itself. I have hundreds of photos, I hope you like the one's I have selected. The North entrance to Yellowstone, with the famous Roosevelt Gate The roads in and out of the park are spectacular in their own right The Old Faithful Inn, which opened in 1904. The interior lobby area is quite remarkable - made of wood and stone all quarried and cut within five miles of the hotel. The stone fireplace (which is functional) made from local stone The original clock (with new mechanism) over the fireplace And our "rustic" room in the original building. The bathroom was down the hall, so the robes were useful! The orginal dining room (it was extended behind the fireplace in 1927). Then on to the park itself. As we drove into the park, we were greeted by a profusion of wildflowers. An English Rose (in front of Lake Yellowstone and some more flowers) Of course, Yellowstone is famous for it's thermal features and there are a lot ! Hot springs with vivid colors produced by different forms of algae: Colors so rich they seem to have been painted Sometimes looking like an abstract painting Sometimes in bands of color as the water drains away And some pools which look invitingly cool. In fact, pools with little or no color (like the one above) are scalding hot. At Mammoth, water pours over crystalline terraces, looking for all the world like a gigantic wedding cake. And of course the geysers, some active, some not. Riverside Geyser This geyser produced lots of steam with an occasional burst of water to the left If you take an early morning (5:45!) photo safari with Betty, in her 1927 bus, the air is cool and the sun hasn't yet risen, Yellowstone can be a wonderful and mysterious place. Betty with her bus. If you are lucky as I was, you may be her only passenger And of course, there's the famous Yellowstone Wildlife. A rare Trumpeter Swan shakes out it's wings A Mountain Goat climbs along a cliff And (at a great distance) an Osprey guards it's young A stag tries to hide amongst the branches of a dead tree The buffalo in the Lamar Valley can be quite numerous They have a very distinctive silhouette A buffalo keeps a wary eye on the tourists And another buffalo rolls in the dirt to rid itself of ticks and fleas And a black bear ambles across a meadow And of course, the fantastic scenery Artists Point The incredible colors in the walls of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone The brink of the lower falls Getting to some of those locations required quite a steep climb This is Tower Fall |